The Treatment of Non-Essential Inputs in a Cobb-Douglas Technology: An Application to Mexican Rural Household-Level Data

18 Pages Posted: 20 Apr 2016

See all articles by Isidro Soloaga

Isidro Soloaga

Universidad Iberoamericana Ciudad de México

Date Written: November 30, 1999

Abstract

One problem when estimating a Cobb-Douglas production function with micro data is how to deal with the observations that show positive output but do not use some of the inputs. As the log of zero is not defined, one standard procedure is to arbitrarily replace those zero values with "sufficiently small" numbers. But can we do better than that? An alternative approach is presented and applied to Mexican farm-level data.

The standard approach for fitting a Cobb-Douglas production function to micro data with zero values is to replace those values with "sufficiently small" numbers to facilitate the logarithmic transformation. In general, the estimates obtained are extremely sensitive to the transformation chosen, generating doubts about the use of a specification that assumes that all inputs are essential (as the Cobb-Douglas does) when that is not the case.

Soloaga presents an alternative method that allows one to estimate the degree of essentiality of the production inputs while retaining the Cobb-Douglas specification. By using the properties of translatable homothetic functions, he estimates by how much the origin of the input set should be translated to allow the Cobb-Douglas functional form to capture the fact that the data have a positive output even when some of the inputs are not used.

To highlight the empirical importance of the approach, he applies it to Mexican farm-level production data that he gathered. Many households did not use family or hired labor in farm production, or had different capital composition (that is, zero value for non-land farm assets).

The estimations provide a clear measurement of the degree of essentiality of potentially non-essential inputs. They also indicate the size of the error introduced by the common "trick" of adding a "small" value to zero input values.

This paper - a product of Trade, Development Research Group - is part of a larger effort in the group to explore conceptual and practical issues relative to the effects of international trade policy on individual producers. The author may be contacted at isoloaga@worldbank.org.

Suggested Citation

Soloaga, Isidro, The Treatment of Non-Essential Inputs in a Cobb-Douglas Technology: An Application to Mexican Rural Household-Level Data (November 30, 1999). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=632569

Isidro Soloaga (Contact Author)

Universidad Iberoamericana Ciudad de México ( email )

United States

HOME PAGE: http://www.iberoeconomia.mx\IsidroSoloaga

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
198
Abstract Views
1,982
Rank
277,324
PlumX Metrics