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Price formation in the raw wool market (1969)

Abstract
Econometric analysis of the demand for raw wool at auction published by other authors has been mainly confined to an analysis of the determinants of the consumption of raw wool. However the purchaser of raw wool at auction must hold his purchases either in transit or in store for some months before either reselling or consuming wool in his own mills. Thus the conventional analysis of the determinants of the demand for wool for consumption is not directly relevant when considering the short run demand for wool at auction. As a result, models based on the conventional analysis do not adequately explain fluctuations in prices paid at auction in primary markets. An earlier attempt by Philpott to explain such fluctuations used annual data. Based on this earlier work we develop in this paper two models of quarterly demand for raw wool at auction and we test these models against quarterly data for the period 1952 to the first quarter of 1967.

Publication details
Download http://hdl.handle.net/10182/1124
Publisher Lincoln College. Agricultural Economics Research Unit.
Repository Lincoln University Research Archive (New Zealand)
Keywords wool industry, wool marketing, wool pricing, textile industry, economic aspects, econometric models, Fields of Research::340000 Economics::340200 Applied Economics::340201 Agricultural economics, Fields of Research::340000 Economics::340200 Applied Economics::340205 Industry economics and industrial organisation, Fields of Research::340000 Economics::340400 Econometrics::340402 Econometric and statistical methods
Type Discussion Paper
Language English
Relation Discussion paper (Lincoln College (Canterbury, N.Z.). Agricultural Economics Research Unit) ; no. 8