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4 - Three Important Developments in the Life of the Cobb–Douglas Regression, 1952–1961

from Part II - The Diffusion of the Cobb–Douglas Regression

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2020

Jeff E. Biddle
Affiliation:
Michigan State University
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Summary

This chapter provides background for later chapters’ case studies of the diffusion of the Cobb–Douglas regression after WWII, reviewing three developments that affected economists’ perception and use of the regression in the 1950s and 1960s: (i) The presentation of the Cobb–Douglas regression in the first “Econometrics” textbooks, which gave a positive impression of the importance and potential of empirical production function research. (ii) E. H. Phelps Brown’s 1957 article criticizing the Cobb–Douglas regression technique. Phelps Brown identified serious problems with Douglas’s methods and claims, but his criticisms often did not apply to, or were effectively answered by, newer research using the regression, and so did little to slow the diffusion of the technique. (iii) The introduction of the CES production function by Arrow, Chenery, Minhas, and Solow in 1961. The CES production function was the first generalization of Cobb–Douglas to be widely adopted by empirical researchers. Also, the authors used assumptions about competition, optimization, and equilibrium to estimate thier production function parameters, a new strategy approach that became a widely accepted practice.

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Progress through Regression
The Life Story of the Empirical Cobb-Douglas Production Function
, pp. 145 - 168
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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