An application of demand theory in projecting New Zealand retail consumption
Authors
Date
1966
Type
Monograph
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Abstract
The increasing emphasis on economic planning in recent
years has made it important that planners and policy-makers
should know, or at least have some idea of, the likely future
courses of leading economic variables.
This paper is a study of retail trading in New Zealand
and its object is to explain, and produce projections of,
domestic consumption of certain commodity groups at the retail
level, and also for all groups as a whole. The individual
commodity groups, chosen on grounds of general interest, data
availability and computational feasibility, are called
(1) meat, (2) other food, (3) apparel, (4) household operation
and (5) miscellaneous. Point projections and tolerance limits
in both real and current value terms are given for 1970 and
1975 for each individual group and for the aggregate of the
groups. Some short-term forecasts are also given to show
the possible usefulness of the projection method in this
direction.