Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
9-1 chapter nine Functional Forms of Regression Models McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Figure 9-1 A constant elasticity model. 9-3 Table 9-1 Weekly lotto expenditure (Y) in relation to weekly personal disposable income (X) ($). 9-4 Figure 9-2 Log-linear model of Lotto expenditure. 9-5 Table 9-2 Real GDP, employment, and real fixed capital, Mexico, 1955-1974. 9-6 Table 9-3 Energy demand in OECD countries, 1960-1982. 9-7 Table 9-4 Population of United States (millions of people), 1970-1999. 9-8 Figure 9-3 9-9 Semilog model. Table 9-5 Quarterly total personal expenditure and categories (billions of dollars) 1993-1−1998-3. 9-10 Figure 9-4 The reciprocal model: Yi = B1 + B2(1/Xi) 9-11 Table 9-6 Year-to-year percentage change in the index of hourly earnings (Y) and the unemployment rate (%) (X), United States, 1958-1969. 9-12 Figure 9-5 9-13 The Phillips curve for the United States, 1958-1969; (a) Reciprocal model; (b) linear model. Table 9-7 Management fee schedule of a mutual fund. 9-14 Figure 9-6 9-15 Management fees and asset size. Table 9-8 Hypothetical cost-output data. 9-16 Figure 9-7 9-17 EVIEWS output of Equation (9.31). Figure 9-8 9-18 Cost-output relationship. Figure 9-9 9-19 MINITAB output of regression (9.34). Table 9-9 Cigarette smoking and deaths from various types of cancer. 9-20 Table 9-10 Gross private domestic investment and gross domestic product, United States, 1988-1997. 9-21 Table 9-11 Summary of functional forms. 9-22 Table 9-12 Functional forms of regression models. 9-23 Table 9-13 Consumer price index (Y) (1980 = 100) and the money supply (X) (marks, in billions), Germany 1971-1987. 9-24 Table 9-14 GNP and money supply, United States, 1973-1987. 9-25 Figure 9A-1 Exponential and logarithmic functions: (a) exponential function; (b) logarithmic function. 9-26