Inventories, expectations, and environmental effects on industry structure : three essays on pulpwood and sawtimber markets /

This dissertation addresses three problems faced by

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gomez, Irma Adriana
Format: Thesis Book
Language:English
Published: [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified] ; 1997.
Subjects:
Online Access:http://proxy.library.tamu.edu/login?url=http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=739839621&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=2945&RQT=309&VName=PQD
Description
Summary:This dissertation addresses three problems faced by
researchers studying natural resource based industries.
First, gathering information on natural resource inventories
is expensive. This inhibits data collection and makes
resource sector modeling and policy analysis challenging.
Second, because producers do not know future market
conditions with certainty, forecasts of resource prices are
required. Price expectations play major roles in natural
resource markets since each period producers must decide
whether to exploit or retain resources. Third, environmental
regulations are important in many natural resource
industries. Given that many natural resource processing
industries are highly concentrated, changes in environmental
regulations may impact industry structure. This dissertation
addresses each one of these issues in the context of timber
markets. The first essay develops a method to impute missing
inventory and growth observations when annual survey
observations are not available. A one-way error component
model is estimated and missing inventory values are imputed
using an optimally-weighted combination of forward and
backward projections. Confidence intervals for imputed
inventory estimates are formed using the bootstrap method.
The second essay uses a model of producer behavior to analyze
alternative price expectations mechanisms and their role in
the timber harvest decision. The model allows for the
possibility that producers are risk averse. Non-nested test
procedures are applied to distinguish which of the
alternative expectations regimes producers are using. The
results show that landowners are risk averse, and that the
price expectation mechanism that best fits the data is the
nonparametric quasi-rational representation. The third essay
explores the linkages between environmental regulations and
market structure using stationary and nonstationary Markov
chain analysis. An application to the pulp and paper
industry in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas show that
environmental regulation affects the probabilities of
production capacity moving from smaller company ownership to
larger company ownership. This result empirically confirms
theoretical suggestions that market structure is endogenous
to environmental policy.
Item Description:Vita.
"Major Subject: Agricultural Economics".
Physical Description:ix, 118 leaves ; 28 cm.
Issued also on microfiche from University Microfilms Inc.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references: pages 109-116.