Components of Manufacturing Inventories
暂无分享,去创建一个
This paper presents a structural model of production and inventory accumulation based on the hypothesis of cost minimization. It differs from previous attempts in several respects. First, it integrates the analysis of input inventories with output inventories, treating the two stocks separately. Second, it distinguishes between temporary and permanent fluctuations in sales as they are anticipated by the industry. Third, it allows for a more general structure of adjustment costs, and in particular for a cost changing the production level rather than only for deviations of the production level from a fixed target. Empirically, there are three principal conclusions. This model performs much better than those with no cost of production adjustment allowed. Disaggregation of inventories provides significant insights into the dynamics of the adjustment process. However, the restrictions on our model implied by the continuous-time stochastic control theory that we utilize are rejected by the data. We believe that a more disaggregated specification or a more detailed econometric treatment of the discrete-time nature of the observations would avoid this difficulty.
[1] R. Caves,et al. Competitive Conditions and the Firm's Buffer Stocks: An Exploratory Analysis , 1979 .
[2] A. Blinder,et al. Inventories, Rational Expectations, and the Business Cycle , 1978 .
[3] M. Lovell. Manufacturers' Inventories, Sales Expectations, and the Acceleration Principle , 1961 .
[4] L. A. Metzler. The Nature and Stability of Inventory Cycles , 1941 .
[5] M. Feldstein,et al. Inventory Behavior in Durable-Goods Manufacturing: The Target-Adjustment Model , 1976 .