Discrete Choice Demand Model
Discrete-choice demand models estimate the demand for differentiated products — cars, cereals, computers — by modeling consumers as choosing the single product that maximizes their random utility, where utility depends on the product's observed characteristics and price plus an unobserved quality term and an idiosyncratic taste shock. Aggregating individual choice probabilities yields predicted market shares, which are matched to observed shares to recover preference parameters. The framework spans the simple multinomial and nested logit of McFadden to the Berry-Levinsohn-Pakes (BLP) random-coefficients model that uses aggregate market data, allows flexible substitution, and instruments for price endogeneity.
اقرأ الطريقة كاملة
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خريطة المناهج
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المصادر
- McFadden, D. (1974). Conditional logit analysis of qualitative choice behavior. In P. Zarembka (Ed.), Frontiers in Econometrics. Academic Press. ISBN: 9780127761503
- Berry, S., Levinsohn, J., & Pakes, A. (1995). Automobile prices in market equilibrium. Econometrica, 63(4), 841–890. DOI: 10.2307/2171802 ↗
كيف تستشهد بهذه الصفحة
ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Discrete-Choice Demand Estimation for Differentiated Products. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/ar/economics/discrete-choice-demand
أيُّ منهج؟
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- Almost Ideal Demand Systemالاقتصاد↔ قارن
- Choice Experiment Valuationالاقتصاد↔ قارن
- Demand System Estimationالاقتصاد↔ قارن