加拿大乳制品需求

M. Veeman, Yanning Peng
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引用次数: 16

摘要

加拿大乳制品行业面临着不断变化的市场环境,加工商对消费者偏好的明显变化做出反应,消费者对零售乳制品货架上产品组合的变化做出反应,行业在国际贸易变化的推动下适应潜在的竞争压力和新市场机会的挑战。本研究的目的是以与消费者行为的经济理论相一致的方式,得出一套对主要乳制品需求的最新和分类估计。这些估计对于政策模型、政策分析和预测是必要的。以前的乳制品需求估计仅适用于液体牛奶、黄油、所有奶酪和“所有其他乳制品”等广泛的产品类别。在这项研究中,主要乳制品和相关食品的四个弱可分离组被指定。这些是牛奶和其他饮料、脂肪和油、乳制品、甜点和相关产品、奶酪和明显的替代品。脱脂奶粉被评估为不属于上述任何一类,但被假设为乳制品蛋白产品的第五个乳制品亚组的成员。由于数据的限制,有必要对该产品采用单方程方法。每个产品分组的适当性通过两个阶段的测试进行评估。首先,使用揭示偏好公理的非参数测试对每个子组进行测试,作为推断每个子组中的选择是否与约束效用最大化一致的手段。第二,对每一分组的参数评估,就估计的需求参数是否相对稳定和合理,进一步证明了分组的适当性。基于这些测试中令人满意的表现,使用线性化版本的几乎理想的需求系统,结合适当的季节性和习惯形成变量,对每个子组进行参数分析。推导并给出了需求的自身价格、交叉价格和支出弹性的估计。总的来说,这些似乎是合理的。自有价格弹性估计的迹象与预期一致;幅度似乎是合理的。正如预期的那样,大多数指定食品的价格没有弹性。然而,黄油、烹饪油/色拉油和其他奶酪似乎是有价格弹性的。酸奶、浓缩牛奶和冰淇淋具有相当的消耗弹性,而两种奶酪和黄油则表现出轻微的消耗弹性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Canadian Dairy Demand
The Canadian dairy industry faces a changing market environment as processors react to apparent shifts in consumers' preferences, consumers react to an altered mix of products on retail dairy shelves, and industry adjusts to potential pressures of competition and the challenge of new market opportunities under the impetus of changes arising from international trade. The purpose of this study is to derive a set of updated and disaggregated estimates of demand for major dairy products in a manner consistent with the economic theory of consumer behaviour. These estimates are necessary for policy models, policy analysis and forecasting. Previously dairy demand estimates were only available for broad product groupings such as fluid milk, butter, all cheese and "all other dairy products". For this study, four weakly separable groupings of major dairy products and related foods are specified. These are milk and other beverages, fats and oils, dairy dessert and related products and cheeses and apparent substitutes. Skim milk powder is assessed not to be a member of any of these groups but is hypothesized to be a member of a fifth dairy subgroup of dairy protein products. Due to data limitations, it was necessary to follow a single-equation approach for this product. The appropriateness of each product grouping was assessed by a two-stage test. First, each subgroup was tested using non-parametric tests of the axioms of revealed preference, as a means of inferring whether or not choices within each subgrouping are consistent with constrained utility maximization. Second, parametric assessment of each subgroup gave further evidence regarding the appropriateness of the groupings in terms of whether the estimated demand parameters are relatively stable and plausible. Based on satisfactory performance in these tests, parametric analyses for each subgroup were conducted using the linearized version of the almost ideal demand system, incorporating appropriate seasonality and habit formation variables. Estimates of own-price, cross-price and expenditure elasticities of demand are derived and presented. In general these seem plausible. Signs on the own-price elasticity estimates are as expected; the magnitudes appear to be reasonable. As expected, the majority of the specified foods are price-inelastic. However, butter, cooking/salad oil and other cheese appear to be price-elastic. Yogurt, concentrated milk and ice cream are fairly expenditure elastic while the two cheese types and butter appear slightly expenditure elastic.
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