A Two-Stage ELES-AIDS Model Rural Household Demand Analysis: Evidence from South-Eastern, Cambodia
DOI: 10.54647/computer52304 64 Downloads 31200 Views
Author(s)
Abstract
A two-stage budgeting ELES-AIDS system employs to explore the household expenditure and food demand consumption in rural Cambodia. In the first stage, we apply the Extended Linear Expenditure System (ELES) to access household expenditure including food, health, education, clothing, living, transportation, fuel, and equipment. A 1% increase in price would increase marginal budget share ( by 0.0538%, 0.0127%, 0.018%, 0.0124%, 0.0193%, 0.0059%, 0.0115% and 0.0113% for food, health, education, clothing, housing, transportation, fuel and equipment, respectively. In addition, the study applied the Almost ideal Demand System to assess the demand for food consumption. The results indicate that a 1% price increase of food items would increase prices by 0.1575%, 0.00645%, 0.0061%, 0.0222%, 0.0464%, 0.0464% and 0.0174% for rice, maize, potato, eggs, vegetables, meat and fruits, while beverages price would decrease by 0.1497%. Furthermore, expenditure elasticity of rice, maize, potato, eggs, and vegetables is less than one, implying that rice, maize, potato, eggs, and vegetables are necessary commodities, while the elasticity of meat, fruit, and beverages is significantly and greater than one, thus, categorizing them as luxury commodities.
Keywords
ELES model, Cambodian rural households, Expenditure elasticity, AIDS model
Cite this paper
Sar Sary, Bun Phearin, Sarin Sereyvatha, Thouk Davit, Sar Saren, Muyobozi Sikalubya,
A Two-Stage ELES-AIDS Model Rural Household Demand Analysis: Evidence from South-Eastern, Cambodia
, SCIREA Journal of Computer.
Volume 7, Issue 3, June 2022 | PP. 51-74.
10.54647/computer52304
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