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Subject: AEJ 95 DupagneM MME Critique of Relative Constancy principle
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Sat, 3 Feb 1996 10:16:50 EST
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A Theoretical and Methodological Critique of the Principle of Relative
 
        Constancy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Michel Dupagne
School of Communication
University of Miami
P.O. Box 248127
Coral Gables, FL 33124-2030
Phone: (305) 284-3500
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Submitted for consideration to the
Media Management & Economics Division for the 1995 convention of
the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication,
 
     Washington, DC.
 
April 1, 1995
 
 
Abstract
After 20 years of empirical research, this paper revisits the theoretical
 
          assumptions of the principle of relative constancy (PRC).  This
principle
 
          or hypothesis holds that consumers spend a constant fraction of their
 
       income on mass media over time (constancy), although they may modify
their
 
          patterns of spending within categories of mass media (functional
 
  equivalence).  A critique of the PRC literature reveals that whereas the
 
          assumption of functional equivalence can be phrased in economic terms,
 
        there is no such validation for the assumption of constancy.
          Methodological factors that may explain why PRC studies have offered
 
      conflicting evidence are also discussed.
 
 
 
 
A Theoretical and Methodological Critique of the Principle of Relative
 
        Constancy
        Since the now-seminal McCombs (1972)'s "Mass Media in the Marketplace," a
 
          growing number of studies have tested the principle of relative
constancy
 
          (PRC) in the United States and abroad.  This principle or hypothesis
holds
 
          that the proportion of income spent on mass media does not change
 
   significantly over time (constancy), although compensatory variations
 
       between mass media categories may occur during the same period to leave
 
         room for the introduction of new mass media goods/services (functional
 
        equivalence).  But despite mass communication researchers' increasing
 
       interest in this topic, several important theoretical and methodological
 
          questions remain before establishing the PRC as a
theoretically-grounded,
 
          empirically-determined hypothesis that characterizes the relationship
 
       between consumer mass media expenditures and income.  Taken as a whole,
 
         this body of literature has revealed mixed support for the principle of
 
         relative constancy, and this begs the question why it is so.  But more
 
        fundamentally, existing
studies have yet to validate the PRC in economic terms and draw connections
 between this principle and standard economic theory.  Unlike the
 
   ecology-based theory of the niche, which has been successfully applied to
 
          the analysis of competition between mass media industries (Dimmick,
1993;
 
          Dimmick & Rothenbuhler, 1984), the principle of relative constancy did
not
 
          benefit from a solid theoretical foundation when it was initially
proposed.
        To remedy this gap in the literature, this paper examines whether the PRC
 
          can pass the test of economic muster and why constancy studies have
 
     produced conflicting results.  Such validation, if supported, would
 
     strengthen the theoretical arguments of the PRC and would acknowledge the
 
          PRC as a sound economic proposition.  This study first reviews the
existing
 PRC literature, then offers a critique of that literature primarily based
 
          on
microeconomic theory, and concludes with a discussion of new directions for
 mass media expenditures research.  It focuses exclusively on the evolution
 of consumer mass media expenditures, that is direct consumer spending on
 
          mass media-related goods (e.g., newspaper, television set) and
services
 
         (e.g., cable television).
The Principle of Relative Constancy
        Although early studies have investigated the relationship between mass
 
         media expenditures and the general economy (for reviews, see McCombs,
1972;
 Son, 1990), it was not until the publication of a descriptive economic
 
         study by Scripps-Howard Research in 1959 that the concept of relative
 
       constancy became formally identified.  Based on an analysis of mass media
 
          expenditures from 1929 to 1957, Charles Scripps, chairperson of the
 
     Scripps-Howard Newspapers board, concluded:
If we may suggest one broad generalization, it is that in spite of the
 
             increasing complexity of mass communications with the advent of new
media,
 
               the pattern of economic support has been relatively constant, and
more
 
             closely related to the general economy than to the various changes
and
 
             trends taking place within the mass media field itself.
 
The consistency evident in the pattern of economic support for the mass
 
              media seems significant.  It suggests that mass communications
have become
 
               a staple of consumption in our society much like food, clothing,
and
 
           shelter.  Its stability in times of economic stress indicates that
 
         consumers feel that mass communications is a necessary [sic] of life,
 
            although their selection of media may vary [emphases added].
(Economic
 
             Support, 1959, p. 6)
Whereas Scripps offered several stimulating ideas for interpreting the
 
        evolution of consumer mass media expenditures in the United States
(i.e.,
 
          constancy,  relationship to the general economy, staple of
consumption, and
 inter-media variations), he did not suggest any specific hypothesis or
 
         statistical technique to test the viability of such assumptions.
        McCombs (1972), and later Wood (1986), elaborated on Scripps' "explicit
 
          point of view" (McCombs, 1972, p. 6), developed hypotheses, and
applied
 
         correlational and regression analysis to the various facets of the
concept.
  As stated by Wood (1986), a key issue of the relative constancy principle
 is the interpretation of Scripps' introductory remarks.
Interpretations and Analyses
        Constancy of Mass Media Expenditures: In his pioneering work, McCombs
 
        (1972) restated Scripps' concept of constancy as follows:
His hypothesis asserts that the amount of economic support provided for
 
              mass communication media consistently follows the ebb and flow of
the
 
            general economy. This means that a relatively constant proportion of
the
 
               available wealth--Gross National Product, for example--will be
devoted to
 
               mass media.  When they have more money [i.e., income], consumers
and
 
           advertisers will spend more on mass media.  When they have less, they
will
 
               spend less on mass media.  The important point is that this ebb
and flow
 
               follows the general economy, not the competition and
technological changes
 
               within mass communication industries. (McCombs, 1972, p. 6)
In sum, a key assumption of the relative constancy is that total mass media
 expenditures will grow or decline proportionate to the pace of the general
 economy.  Regardless of income changes, consumers will always devote about
 the same share of income to the mass media; behaviorally, it is implicitly
 assumed that they will react fairly quickly to rising or declining income
 
          by adjusting their mass media spending accordingly.  To test this
 
   hypothesis, McCombs and his co-authors correlated categories of media s
 
        pending with time, controlling for inflation, population growth, and
 
      personal income (McCombs, 1972; McCombs & Eyal, 1980; McCombs & Son,
1986).
  The sign and magnitude of the correlation coefficients (from -1 to +1)
 
          indicates the direction and strength of the relationship between mass
media
 expenditures and time.  According to McCombs and Eyal (1980), a perfectly
 
          monotonic (i.e., steady) increase and decrease across time would yield
a
 
          trend[1] of +1 and -1, respectively.  McCombs (1972) establishes
statistical
 
          significance for the relative constancy as follows:
 
If the probability (p value) of a given r's being a chance discrepancy from
 zero is equal to or less than five times in a hundred (p _ .05), the null
 
               hypothesis is rejected and the empirically reported value is
accepted.
 
              But, if p > .05 then the empirical value is ignored and the r
considered to
 be zero. (p. 11)
In other words, if the coefficient is significantly different from zero at
 
          the .05 level, the trend is considered non-zero.  The reverse would
support
 the principle of relative constancy, evidencing "absence of movement over
 
          time" (McCombs, 1972, p. 18).  Wood (1986) labeled this interpretation
of
 
          the relative constancy principle the "time-trend constancy hypothesis"
 
        because time (i.e., physical time) is the primary predictor.
        Functional Equivalence: McCombs also elaborated on the second key element
 
          of Scripps' reasoning: functional equivalence (also called inter-media
 
        variations).  He relied on past research, especially Melvin DeFleur, to
 
         hypothesize that consumers will vary in their selection of mass media.
In
 
          Theories of Mass Communication, DeFleur and Ball-Rokeach (1989) use
the
 
         term "functional alternatives" to describe a complementary relationship
 
         between types of mass media that carry the same function; on a broader
 
        level, this notion explains how consumers change their patterns of mass
 
         media usage over time.  "Each of these functional alternatives to the
 
       newspaper has eaten into the circulation of the daily press.  Each, in
some
 sense, provides news, information, or entertainment in a way that once was
 the exclusive province of the newspaper" (DeFleur & Ball-Rokeach, 1989, p.
 60).  Formally stated, the concept of functional equivalence holds that
 
          "an entertainment or activity will be displaced by the newer one
provided
 
          it serves the same needs as the established activity but does so more
 
       cheaply or conveniently" [emphasis added] (Himmelweit, 1977, p. 12).
        McCombs (1972) posits that the sociological notion of functional
 
   equivalence is consistent with the premises of the relative constancy
 
       hypothesis.  Limited by time and budget, consumers must decide which of
the
 competing media--which serve the same communication function (e.g., news,
 
          entertainment)--they should select.  For McCombs (1972), functional
 
     equivalence is an intrinsic part of the consumer decisionmaking process,
 
          whereby consumers make choices among different but functionally
equivalent
 
          types of mass media after considering their value individually.
 
  Consequently, the principle of relative constancy assumes "a tremendous ebb
 and flow of money among the various media" (McCombs, 1972, p. 6).  For
 
         instance, an increase in electronic media expenditures would yield a
 
      decrease in print media expenditures, but the overall proportion of income
 
          devoted to mass media would remain unchanged.  To succeed in the
 
  marketplace, new communication technologies can only expand to the
 
    detriment of old technologies (see McCombs, 1972).
        Whereas the constancy assumption is generally tested using inferential
 
         statistics, the functional equivalence assumption is substantiated
using
 
          plots of mass media expenditure categories.
        Wood's Critique: In a watershed article, Wood (1986) identified and
 
      discussed three problems inherent in McCombs' analyses.  First, because
 
         mass media expenditures are treated as time-series data, those data are
 
         likely to be serially correlated (autocorrelated); therefore,
correlational
 analyses are inappropriate statistical techniques for testing the
 
    constancy assumption of the PRC.  If residuals at different points in time
 
          are correlated, successive observations will then be related to each
other
 
          (Ostrom, 1990).  In the case of positively or negatively correlated
 
     residuals,[2] tests of significance and R} values can lead to erroneous
 
      conclusions (Gujarati, 1988).  Wood (1986) handled the problem of
 
   autocorrelation by first detecting it using the Durbin-Watson test and then
 modifying the original ordinary least squares regression equation to
 
       eliminate it.
        Second, Wood questioned the validity of zero correlation for establishing
 
          constancy of mass media expenditures over time.  He argued that zero
 
      correlation coefficients could conceal substantial variations in
 
  expenditures within the analyzed period.
        Finally, he recommends using disposable personal income (DPI) rather than
 
          personal income.  Because DPI consists only of private consumption and
 
        savings, this variable is a more refined measure of income, thereby
 
     decreasing measurement error and improving the testing of mass media
 
      expenditures-income relationships.
        But perhaps more importantly, Wood (1986) offers a second model of
 
     relative constancy.  The "income-share constancy hypothesis" holds that
 
         "when income changes, the share of income spent on media does not
 
   significantly change" (Wood, 1986, p. 41).  Unlike McCombs' partial
 
     correlation approach and the time-trend constancy interpretation, the
 
       income-share interpretation does not include a time variable.  To test
both
 hypotheses, Wood ran regression analyses using total mass media spending
 
          as the dependent variable.[3]  According to Wood and O'Hare (1991),
the
 
      constant income-share proposition would be supported if the intercept of
 
          the fitted function is not significantly different from zero (C = _0 +
_1 Y
 + e).  If it is statistically significant, there is evidence that media
 
          spending as a fraction of income is not constant and that consumers
spend
 
          an increasing (or decreasing) portion of their DPI on mass media.[4]
For the
 
          time-trend constancy, if the coefficient of the time variable is not
 
      significantly different from zero, holding DPI constant (C = _0 + _1 time
+
 _3 Y + e), this would signify the absence of significant increases or
 
        decreases in mass media expenditures and would support the principle of
 
         relative constancy.
Research Findings in the United States
        After this theoretical and methodological description, what can we
 
     conclude about the principle of relative constancy from the existing
 
      empirical research?  In support of a movement of long-term constancy, some
 
          studies have reported that consumers' mass media expenditures have
remained
 relatively stable over several decades (McCombs, 1972; McCombs & Eyal,
 
         1980; Son, 1990; Wood & O'Hare, 1991).  However, researchers also found
 
         that consumer spending on mass media could deviate noticeably from
 
    constancy when they broke down the analysis by decade (Wood & O'Hare, 1991)
 or more contextually when they considered the impact of successful
 
     consumer electronics innovations on total media expenditures (Fullerton,
 
          1988; Glascock, 1993; McCombs & Son, 1986; Noh, 1994; Son, 1990; Wood
&
 
         O'Hare, 1991).  A brief review of U.S. PRC studies follows.
        McCombs (1972) analyzed consumer mass media expenditures from 1929 to 1968
 and found that the trend for total media spending (in constant dollars per
 household) was (r =) .228, p = .08, suggesting near constancy of media
 
         spending.  Likewise, McCombs and Eyal (1980) found a modest decline in
 
        media spending (in constant dollars per household) from 1968 to 1977
(trend
 = -.324).  Several differences within mass media categories were apparent,
 though.  The trend for periodicals (+.832) was opposite to that for books
 
          (-.876).  The authors considered these disparities as "short-term
 
   perturbations" (p. 158) and concluded that "even with a proliferation of
 
          audio-visual communication services and devices during the past
decade, the
 historical patterns of spending on print and other mass media remain much
 
          the same" (McCombs & Eyal, 1980, p. 158).
        But more recent studies have revealed findings that contradict the
 
     relative constancy principle.  For example, McCombs and Son (1986) found
 
          that consumers increased their media spending between 1975 and 1984
(trend
 
          = .652, p = .057).  Whereas  print media expenditures decreased
 
 significantly from 1975 to 1984 (trend = -.752), electronic media
 
   expenditures increased substantially during that 10-year period (trend =
 
          +.802).  The authors suggest that the diffusion of video cassette
recorders
 is probably responsible for these deviations from the relative constancy.[5]
 McCombs and Son (1986), however, found support for the functional
 
    equivalence assumption of the relative constancy principle.  From 1975 to
 
          1984, increasing expenditures on cable TV and electronic media were
offset
 
          by a sharp decrease in expenditures on print media.
        Another study reported that innovators and early adopters diverted
 
     resources from other media in 1949-1950 to accommodate the price of
 
     television receivers (Fullerton, 1988).  In regard to the relative
 
    constancy principle, the author states:
This sharp and brief interruption of the usual curve expected under the
 
              principle of relative constancy need not be taken as an indication
that the
 principle is not generally supported.  The fact that the trend line
 
           quickly returned to a normal pattern indicates that there is a band
of
 
             equilibrium within which all media spending tends to remain.  The
sharp
 
              departure from the trend indicates, however, that innovators and
early
 
             adopters may represent exceptions to the principle of relative
constancy.
 
               (Fullerton, 1988, p. 82)
So despite these short-term departures, Fullerton (1988) concludes that the
 results tend to support the principle of relative constancy.  Furthermore,
 the finding that some consumers diverted spending from other media to
 
        television supports the functional equivalence assumption.
        Using regression analysis with 1968-1981 data, Wood (1986) found that the
 
          time-trend constancy and income-share constancy hypotheses differed in
 
        their results and that mass media expenditures as a share of income
 
     fluctuate at different points in time contrary to the constancy principle.
 The author argued that a long-term regression analysis could mask changes
 
          that took place in specific decades.  This statement implies that U.S.
mass
 media expenditures may not be a fully linear function of DPI, but may ev
 
          olve by bursts provoked by the successful adoption of new
communication
 
         technologies.
        Testing both the time-trend constancy and income-share constancy
 
   hypotheses from 1929 to 1988, Wood and O'Hare (1991) confirmed the
 
    long-term constancy of U.S. mass media expenditures for both models.
 
       However, they also found that consumers devoted a larger share of their
 
         income to mass media, especially new media, from 1979 to 1988 without
 
       reducing their spending on print and electronic media.
        Using a similar approach, Son (1990) found mixed support for the two
 
       hypotheses (see also Son & McCombs, 1993).  Before running his regression
 
          analysis, he logarithmically transformed and first-differenced the
data to
 
          eliminate autocorrelation.  He found that total mass media
expenditures
 
         from 1929 to 1987 did not increase as a share of income, vindicating
the
 
          income-share constancy interpretation.  On the other hand, the
time-trend
 
          hypothesis was not supported because consumer spending on mass media
incre
 
          ased over time when DPI was held constant.  This study suggests that
the
 
          introduction of cable TV and the VCR has caused mass media
expenditures to
 
          rise between 1975 and 1987 (see also Glascock, 1993).  Indeed,
analyzing
 
          the same Department of Commerce data from 1929 to 1974, Son (1990)
found
 
          support for both relative constancy models.
Research Findings in Foreign Countries
        Outside the United States, only two studies dealing with the principle of
 
          relative constancy have been conducted.  Werner (1986) found that
 
   Norwegians' mass media expenditures were relatively constant from 1958 to
 
          1982 and grew more slowly than expenditures on other leisure and
 
  educational activities.  She concludes that these findings support the
 
        principle of relative constancy.  However, the author's assessment stems
 
          from a description of six household expenditure surveys in current
prices,
 
          and not from a genuine analysis of aggregate media expenditures in
constant
 prices.  No formal testing of the relative constancy principle using
 
       either correlational or regression analysis was performed.
        Dupagne (1994) tested both the income-share constancy (C =  _0 + _1 Y + e)
 and time-trend constancy (C = _0 + _1 time + _3 Y + e) hypotheses in the
 
          United Kingdom, applying regression techniques (generalized least
squares
 
          estimation) to consumer mass media expenditures from 1963 to 1989.
The
 
         analysis confirms a long-term constancy in mass media spending,
regardless
 
          of variations in disposable personal income and the passage of time.
But
 
          the results also showed that, in the 1980s, U.K. consumers devoted a
 
      greater share of their income to mass media, largely due to the
 
 introduction of video hardware and software.  Thus, both U.S. and U.K.
 
        consumers spent an increasing share of their income on new media in the
 
         last decade.
Critique of the Relative Constancy Literature
        It is clear that the PRC studies reviewed here, especially McCombs (1972)
 
          and Wood (1986), have generated fresh ideas and proposed new
methodologies,
 all contributing to refine the analysis of mass media expenditures.  But
 
          despite this pioneering empirical work, several important theoretical
and
 
          methodological concerns remain.  For instance, recent research has
done
 
         little to investigate new theoretical viewpoints about the relative
 
     constancy or link it to a particular economic theory or consumption theory;
 instead it has mostly relied on statements made by Scripps in 1959.
 
       However, Scripps did not really develop a conceptual framework to support
 
          his position.  We are then left with a proposition with little
theoretical
 
          foundation.  Another concern emerging from the literature review
relates to
 the great variability of the findings.  Whereas the assumption of
 
    functional equivalence has gained ample support in PRC studies, the
 
     evidence in support of the assumption of constancy has been mixed.  Why is
 
          it so?  This section will address these and other theoretical and
 
   methodological issues.
Theoretical Issues
        Recently, Demers (1994) has questioned the relative constancy's
 
  assumptions of fixed mass media expenditures and time over the years.  He
 
          contends that "there is no theoretical reason to justify the argument
that
 
          spending on mass media should remain relatively constant through time,
even
 if empirically it appears to have been that way" (p. 32).  The author
 
        maintains that the proportion of income spent on mass media would have
 
        increased over time, had the mass media, like other goods, been widely
 
        available to the public prior to the 20th century.  He states:
Although it may be true that the proportion spent has remained relatively
 
               constant during the 20th century, a longer historical view
naturally would
 
               force one to conclude that it has increased.  The reason is
simple: For all
 practical purposes, only the 19th and 20th centuries have consumers and
 
               advertisers spent money on mass communication because mass media
were not
 
               available before then.  Mass media are the product of an urban,
 
      industrialized society.  Thus, a long-term view suggests that relative
 
             spending on media and advertising has increased, albeit the trend
need not
 
               take a monotonic form. (pp. 35-36)
        In his second criticism, Demers (1994) recognizes that "time is a limited
 
          resource" (p. 36), but argues that "there is little evidence to
suggest
 
         that time spent with media has reached a threshold or has remained
fixed or
 stagnant" (p 36). Citing several studies, he suggests quite appropriately
 
          that consumers have expanded the amount of time spent on the media in
the
 
          last decades.  But then he contends that if we accept the assumption
that
 
          increasing time spent on the media translates into increasing mass
media
 
          expenditures, consumers, contrary to the principle of relative
constancy,
 
          should devote a greater proportion of their income to the mass media.
        Demers' first criticism is, of course, untestable because mass media is a
 
          fairly recent consumption category, compared to food or housing.  We
will
 
          examine the notion of constancy as a valid economic proposition later
in
 
          the paper.  The second criticism warrants some discussion, because it
 
       raises the important question of time ceiling.
        Time Ceiling: To justify the relative constancy of mass media
          expenditures, McCombs (1972) contends that time and income are scarce
 
       resources that constrain the growth of consumer mass media expenditures.
 
          His first point involves the scarcity of time--time spent on the mass
media
 cannot be extended ad infinitum:
For a time the consumer can increase the amount or the number of goods
 
             enjoyed per time unit.  He sips his martini, scans his newspaper
and
 
           listens to the stereo simultaneously.  But there must be some limit.
 
           Indeed, signs of the limit already are appearing.  We are already in
the
 
               age of half-read and unread newspapers. (McCombs, 1972, p. 62)
In other words, consumers will reach a time ceiling or threshold at which
 
          point they will no longer be able to accommodate additional mass media
 
        activities, given their time allocation to leisure.  McCombs' argument
 
        implies that although the amount of time spent on the mass media can be
 
         extended in the short term, it cannot be stretched beyond a certain
level
 
          in the long term because it is limited by the time devoted to other
daily
 
          activities, such as working, sleeping, and eating.  Even if average
 
     consumers work less in the decades to come, or even sleep less, time
 
      devoted to non-media-related activities cannot be indefinitely compressed
 
          within the notion of 20th-century Western lifestyle.  Unless radical
 
      changes occur, Western consumers will continue to spend a major part of
 
         their day working, eating, sleeping, doing household chores, and the
like.
 
        Empirical research shows that leisure time or time spent on the media in
 
          the United States has risen since the 1960s (see Hamilton, 1991;
Hornik &
 
          Schlinger, 1981; Ogan & Kelly, 1986; Robinson, 1981, 1989; Vogel,
1990),
 
          although this trend may have attenuated in the late 1980s (Robinson,
1989;
 
          Son,[6] 1990).  But should we automatically posit that this increase
in time
 
          will cause mass media spending to increase as Demers (1994) seems to
 
      suggest?  The evidence on the relationship between increasing mass media
 
          use and increasing mass media spending has been mixed.  Whereas Wood
and
 
          O'Hare (1991) found that U.S. consumers increased their share of
income
 
         spent on the mass media, especially on new media (e.g., cable and VCR)
in
 
          the 1980s, Ogan and Kelly (1986) found that respondents did not report
 
        spending much money on these new communication technologies.  More
 
    importantly, Ogan and Kelly's findings showed no evidence of a relationship
 between the amount of time respondents reported to allocate for mass media
 use and the amount of expenditures they reported to spend on these media.
 Whether these different conclusions are due to methodological variations
 
          or other factors remains to be determined.  Wood and O'Hare (1991)
used
 
         secondary aggregate data from the Department of Commerce; Ogan and
Kelly
 
          (1986) relied on primary survey data collected in Indianapolis.
        Although McCombs (1972) clearly perceives time as the ultimate constraint
 
          on mass media expenditures, a second related reason for advocating the
 
        principle of relative constancy is limited income.  He states:
If indeed the goals or needs of each consumer are fixed, a voluntary
 
           consumption maximum eventually has to be reached.  As income grows,
more
 
               and more wants will be gratified.  Ultimately, the utility of
additions to
 
               income and, especially consumption, will be zero.  It can be
argued, of
 
              course, that the tremendous growth of mass communication--growth
perhaps
 
               constrained only by the consumer's ability to finance it--refutes
this
 
             notion of fixed wants. (McCombs, 1972, p. 62)
        While McCombs alludes to some economic principles (e.g., time scarcity,
 
          income scarcity) to rationalize the principle of relative constancy,
rather
 than just taking it for granted based on the pattern of empirical
 
    findings, he and other researchers fail to expose explicitly the connection
 between economics and the principle of relative constancy.  Wood (1986)
 
          mentions in passing the relevance of the Engel law for the
income-share
 
         constancy hypothesis, but he provides little explication why it should
be
 
          so.  This is the most fundamental weakness of the existing literature:
a
 
          lack of any in-depth microeconomic or macroeconomic justification for
the
 
          principle of relative constancy as a theoretically-driven economic
 
    proposition.  So far arguments for or against the constancy have originated
 from the mass communication literature.  Given that the principle of
 
       relative constancy describes an economic relationship between consumer
mass
 media expenditures and income, it would seem logical to put the principle
 
          of relative constancy and its assumptions to the test of economic
 
   soundness.  In other words, does economic theory confirm the validity of
 
          the relative constancy principle?
        Economic Theory - Scarcity: This economic principle holds that "goods are
 
          scarce because there are not enough resources to produce all the goods
that
 people want to consume" (Samuelson & Nordhaus, 1989, p. 26).  Stated
 
       differently, while consumers' wants are virtually unlimited, goods remain
 
          scarce or finite in supply even for highly productive societies.
Firms can
 only produce so much.  Unlimited wants are also constrained by limited
 
         income and time (Eastwood, 1985).
        McCombs (1972) is quite correct in using the scarcity rationale for
 
      justifying that consumer spending on mass media will not be boundless.
But
 scarcity--constraints on time, income, and supply of goods--does not imply
 that consumers will be forced to spend a constant fraction of their income
 on a particular good (e.g., beef, light bulb, newspaper) or consumption
 
          category (e.g., food, housing, mass media).  Such assumption does not
 
       necessarily hold up over time, at least in the United States.  Magrabi,
 
         Chung, Cha, and Yang (1991) report that consumer spending on food has
 
       decreased dramatically since the beginning of the 20th century; that
budget
 share spent on housing has barely changed from 1901 to 1987; and that
 
        households have spent less of their budgets on apparel but more on
 
    transportation over time.  Rather the consequence of scarcity is that
 
       consumers are compelled to make choices in their daily life based
primarily
 on income, time, and preferences.
        How consumers behave and purchase goods given these constraints falls
 
        under the purview of demand (or consumer behavior) theory within
 
  microeconomics.  Demand theory assumes that consumers are rational--that
 
          is, they seek to maximize utility (i.e., total satisfaction derived
from
 
          the consumption of goods/services) subject to various constraints
(e.g.,
 
          income, price of goods, time) (see Eastwood, 1985).  The next logical
step
 
          in this economic exposition is to determine whether demand theory can
apply
 to the constancy and functional equivalence assumptions.
        Economic Theory - Engel Law: The relative constancy hypothesis assumes
 
         that the proportion of income devoted to mass media will remain
unchanged
 
          over time.  Regardless of variations in income levels, this percentage
will
 always be the same value, say 3% (this is the thrust of the income-share
 
          constancy hypothesis).  If this percentage is fluctuating--say 5% the
first
 year, 2% the second year, and 8% the third year--the pattern observed
 
        would be evidence against the principle of relative constancy.  Another
way
 to state the same idea is to say that mass media spending and income
 
       covary--that is mass media expenditures do not change significantly
 
     relative to income.  When income increases by 1%, we would expect mass
 
        media expenditures to increase by 1% as well.  As McCombs (1972) pointed
 
          out, for the constancy hypothesis to be supported, mass media
expenditures
 
          and income would be expected to move together--proportionately to each
 
        other.  As income rises, consumer spending on mass media should also
 
      increase (and vice versa).  But is McCombs' reasoning congruent with the
 
          Engel law (or curve), the traditional microeconomic model of consumer
 
       choice that addresses consumer responses to changes in income?
        Simply stated, the Engel law raises the following question: Assuming that
 
          the price of a good X is fixed, how much X would be consumed for a
variety
 
          of incomes?  The Engel law is tied to two important concepts, the
budget
 
          line and the indifference curve, each deserving some development.  In
 
       standard economic terms, consumer behavior is driven by the interaction
of
 
          preferences (indifference curve) and opportunities (budget line).
Based on
 these conditions, consumers can make choices.  The budget line shows which
 baskets of goods consumers can afford to buy, given prices and income,
 
         whereas the indifference curve depicts consumers' preferences or tastes
 
         regardless of whether they can actually purchase those preferred goods
(see
 Landsburg, 1992).  As a general rule, a change in income (increase or
 
        decrease) will produce a parallel shift in the budget line.  To
determine
 
          consumer choices, we must draw the indifference curve and the budget
line
 
          on the same graph.  Assuming that consumers are rational (i.e., they
behave
 in such a way to improve their welfare), they will then select the basket
 
          at the point where their budget line is tangent to an indifference
curve.
 
          This point, the consumer's optimum, is the most desirable basket of
all
 
         baskets on the budget line (see Figure 1 for an illustration).[7]
        Generally, Engel curves exhibit an upward slope (Landsburg, 1992).  As
 
         consumers' income increases, they tend to buy more of all goods.  For
 
       normal goods, it is indeed the case.  A "normal" good (also called a
 
      superior good) is "a good that the consumer chooses to consume more of
when
 his income goes up" (Landsburg, 1992, p. 95).  For instance, with rising
 
          income, it is likely that consumers would purchase more consumer
 
  electronics products.  On the other hand, a good is said to be "inferior"
 
          when the consumer chooses less of the good even though his or her
income
 
          goes up.  In this case, the Engel curve will slope downward.  For
instance,
 a consumer is likely to consume less margarine or potatoes as his or her
 
          income rises.
        The Engel curve provides a useful framework for analyzing the evolution of
 mass media expenditures in economic terms and describing how consumers
 
         would adjust their level of mass media expenditures in reaction to
income
 
          changes.  Furthermore, it can be directly linked to the income
elasticity
 
          of demand which estimates the percentage change in quantity in
response to
 
          a percentage change in income, thereby enabling researchers to
classify
 
         mass media goods into inferior goods (income elasticity ax < 0),
necessity
 
          goods (0 < ax _ 1), and luxury goods ((ax > 1).[8]  The Engel law does
not
 
         stipulate, however, that the relationship between expenditures on a
good
 
          and income ought to be proportional or constant.
        Economic Theory - Constancy: Earlier in this section, Demers (1994) was
 
          quoted to state that "there is no theoretical reason to justify the
 
     argument that spending on mass media should remain relatively constant
 
        through time, even if empirically it appears to have been that way" (p.
 
         32).  In view of the foregoing economic discussion, we must conclude
that
 
          he is right.  The constancy assumption of mass media expenditures has
no
 
          economic foundation.  The Engel law would suggest that increasing or
 
      decreasing changes in income translate into corresponding changes in mass
 
          media spending, but it does not imply that the share of income on mass
 
        media should be a constant.  In hindsight, few economists would
hypothesize
 a constant relationship between income and expenditures on a good over
 
         time, whether this good is inferior, a necessity, or a luxury.  For the
 
         constancy assumption of the relative constancy, we are then left with
 
       previous empirical results for guidance.  But that does not mean that the
 
          entire PRC is atheoretical--in fact, as discussed below, the
assumption of
 
          functional equivalence is supported by economic theory.
        Economic Theory - Functional Equivalence: The concept of functional
 
      equivalence can be explained in economic terms by relying on the previous
 
          discussion.  Because wants are limited by such scarce resources as
time and
 income, consumers must choose among alternatives.  They must reconcile
 
         their ability to buy (budget constraint) and their willingness to trade
 
         (indifference).  Let us suppose that consumers enjoy a fixed budget for
the
 mass media and, for the sake of argument, that there are only two media
 
          goods, newspapers and magazines. The ability to purchase media goods
will
 
          be determined by the budget share devoted to mass media and the prices
of
 
          newspapers and magazines.  Assuming that consumers spend all their
fixed
 
          budget on the mass media, the only way to buy more of magazines would
be to
 buy less of newspapers (see Eastwood, 1985).  Within the budget
 
  constraint, market prices (relative prices--e.g., how many newspapers
 
       consumers can purchase for a magazine) determine at what point consumers
 
          will substitute units of newspapers for units of magazines or vice
versa
 
          (marginal rate of substitution).  A key assumption of consumers'
 
  willingness to trade (preferences) is that the locus of all bundles (all
 
          combinations of two goods) on a particular indifference curve implies
that
 
          consumers derive the same overall level of utility.  So it is quite
 
     possible for consumers to substitute more magazines for newspapers and
 
        still obtain the same degree of utility.
        The concept of functional equivalence demonstrates why consumers alter
 
         their mix of mass media goods assuming a fixed mass media budget.
 
    Functional equivalence can serve as a useful theoretical point of departure
 to predict and analyze the pecuniary impact of new communication
 
   technologies on traditional technologies (see Noh [1994] for a discussion
 
          of functionality of VCR technology).
Methodological Issues
        We could wonder why some studies reviewed in the first section offer
 
       conflicting results.  Second only to lack of theoretical justification,
the
 issue of multiple constancy conceptualizations muddles the results even
 
          further and casts more doubts on the validity of that assumption.  As
 
       indicated in the literature review, the principle of relative constancy
can
 be conceptualized and estimated in various ways and at different levels of
 sophistication.  Although it is beneficial to use a multi-model approach
 
          to test the relative constancy, a lack of a primary model can be
confusing,
 especially if income-share/time-trend interpretations produce different
 
          results (Wood, 1986).  If those two models are on equal footing and
differ
 
          in their findings, then how do we conclude there is support or
non-support
 
          for the principle of relative constancy?   Which interpretation is
better?
 So far we lack a unified operationalization of the constancy assumption.
 
          Future empirical research should establish at the onset which model is
the
 
          primary test of the constancy hypothesis and provide a rationale for
this
 
          decision.
        Four other factors may explain these discrepancies (see Son, 1990): DPI
 
          versus PI;  correlation versus regression; short-term constancy versus
 
        long-term constancy; and the handling of serial correlation problems.
The
 
          rationale for using disposable personal income and regression
analysis,
 
         instead of personal income and correlational analysis, has already been
 
         exposed above.  But the fourth and fifth reasons deserve some
explanation.
 Son (1990) has argued that running analyses with such a small sample size
 
          as 10 observations may lead to different findings than running the
same
 
         analyses with 50 observations.  Indeed, studies using more than 25
 
    observations uphold the principle of long-term constancy (Dupagne, 1994;
 
          McCombs, 1972; Son, 1990; Wood & O'Hare, 1991).  However, for analyses
with
 10 observations, decreases or increases in media spending--which result in
 deviations from the relative constancy--often happen (Dupagne, 1994;
 
       McCombs & Son, 1986; Son, 1990; Wood & O'Hare, 1991).  Statistically,
 
       analyses with only 10 cases invite criticism because the sampling error
is
 
          very large.  McCombs and Nolan (1992) have critiqued Wood's approach
to
 
         break down the constancy analysis per decade: "One can dismiss these
 
      departures from constancy as random variations in small data sets (n = 10)
 
          given the arbitrary division of the data into sets without any
underlying
 
          historical unity in terms of mass communication" (p. 47).  Ironically,
 
        McCombs has analyzed 10-year mass media expenditures data on two
occasions
 
          (McCombs & Eyal, 1980; McCombs & Son, 1986) without necessarily
providing
 
          an adequate justification for selecting starting and ending data
points the
 way he did (McCombs & Eyal, 1980).  Whereas in theory, collection of
 
       expenditure data must depend upon historical and economic considerations,
 
          in practice it is often the availability of data that guides the
 
  data-gathering process for these secondary analyses.
        Yet, McCombs and Nolan (1992) have a point here: It is important to ground
 mass media expenditures analyses in a relevant historical context.  If
 
         communication researchers present a compelling reasoning for selecting
 
        their sample of years the way they do, they make it more defensible to
use
 
          a small number of observations because the period under scrutiny may
 
      exhibit certain unusual media-related or general spending characteristics
 
          that are worth statistical exploration.  For example, several
constancy
 
         analyses have isolated the period from the late seventies to the
eighties,
 
          when the diffusion of video hardware and software in the marketplace
began,
 to investigate the evolution of mass media spending during that period
 
         (Dupagne, 1994; McCombs & Son, 1986; Son, 1990; Wood & O'Hare, 1991).
        A fifth reason for these mixed results might be the way the presence of
 
          autocorrelation has been handled.  Although Son (1990) and Wood and
O'Hare
 
          (1991) use the same data sets and regression models, they dealt with
 
      autocorrelation differently and arrived not unexpectedly at different
 
       results.  The specification of a correct model that meets the assumptions
 
          of bivariate or multiple regression is essential in econometric
analysis.
 
          The existing constancy literature has focused primarily on eliminating
 
        serial correlation, but has done little to refine models or identify the
 
          source of serial correlation.  Serial correlation more than anything
else
 
          means that the model is misspecified and/or that relevant variables
might
 
          have been left out.  If omitted, important variables will be relegated
to
 
          the error term.  To the extent that these excluded variables (e.g.,
price
 
          of magazines), now part of the error term, might influence variables
 
      included in the model (e.g., price of newspapers), a systematic pattern of
 
          the residuals might appear, which would indicate a (false) problem of
 
       serial correlation (Gujarati, 1988).  Unfortunately, mass communication
 
         researchers have yet to expand constancy or mass media expenditure
models
 
          beyond the basic mass media expenditures-income relationship.
Discussion
        It is vital to realize from the onset that the relative constancy
 
    hypothesis is not an economic theory per se; it is a proposition (or a set
 
          of generalizations) that originates from the mass media literature,
and has
 been conceptualized and tested within the communication discipline.   As
 
          demonstrated in the previous section, the principle of relative
constancy
 
          is a fairly atheoretical approach to the characterization of mass
media
 
         expenditures over time; it is primarily supported by empirical
research.
 
          Are we then reaching a cul-de-sac or is it possible to ameliorate our
 
       understanding of this important topic--mass media expenditures-income
 
       relationships--in media economics by investigating mass media spending
from
 an angle other than through the PRC?  This section discusses some
 
    theoretical and methodological suggestions for future research on consumer
 
          mass media expenditures.
Theoretical Recommendations
        Constancy: Because the constancy assumption of the PRC is not grounded in
 
          any economic theory, one may argue that it should not even be tested.
This
 lack of theoretical foundation should at least signal to communication
 
         researchers to consider abandoning (or downplaying) the study of this
 
       assumption in favor of more promising theoretically-based mass media
 
      expenditures-income inquiries.  This is not to say that the testing of the
 
          constancy proposition is useless or irrelevant; as exploratory
research, it
 has its role to illuminate potential relationships between mass media
 
        spending and income.  But the constancy research has limited
far-reaching
 
          implications due to its lack of proper theoretical grounding and
offers few
 opportunities to advance the subject of media economics theoretically and
 
          open new avenues for mass media expenditure research.  Since the
1970s,
 
         analyses of consumer mass media expenditures have been conducted within
the
 realm of the PRC.  This paper has reappraised the significance of the PRC
 
          in media economics, and suggests if not to sever ties between the PRC
and
 
          consumer mass media expenditures at least focus greater attention on
 
      alternative models of consumer mass media expenditures.
        Future studies should explore other linkages between mass media
 
  expenditures and consumption theories.  This is where major theoretical
 
         contributions to the mass media expenditures research could be
achieved.
 
          To a certain degree, the principle of relative constancy falls under
the
 
          broad umbrella of mechanistic Keynesian income-consumption tradition
 
      because it assumes that consumers respond immediately to changes in income
 
          levels.  If we apply the Keynesian macroeconomic theory to the
          microeconomic context of the constancy hypothesis, the absolute income
 
        hypothesis in the long term would suggest a near proportional
relationship
 
          between DPI and mass media expenditures (see Froyen, 1990).  Likewise,
 
        Friedman's permanent income hypothesis also assumes that consumers
behave
 
          in a backward-looking fashion as they revise their estimate of
permanent
 
          income "based on how last period's actual income differed from last
 
     period's estimate of permanent income" (Froyen, 1990, p. 398).  The
 
     permanent income hypothesis posits that
the reaction of current consumption to an increase or decrease in current
 
               income depends on the individual's expectations about whether the
increase
 
               or decrease in income is likely to continue in future periods or
is simply
 
               a windfall gain or loss.  Permanent changes in income levels are
assumed to
 directly affect expected consumption, whereas transitory changes are
 
            assumed to have no effect on expected consumption. (Doran, 1989, p.
262)
In contrast, when we consider the rational expectations perspective in
 
        conjunction with the permanent income hypothesis, we assume that
consumers
 
          estimate permanent income by using "all information available prior to
the
 
          current period" (Froyen, 1990, p. 398), thereby forming
forward-looking
 
         (rational) expectations.  The rational expectations perspective
suggests
 
          that household consumption follows a stochastic (i.e., random) path
(Hall,
 
          1978).  Because of the random walk nature of consumption, no current
 
      variable but the current consumption level should have predictive power
for
 future consumption.  Future work testing the permanent income hypothesis
 
          and/or rational expectations perspective with aggregate measures of
mass
 
          media expenditures and wealth would offer valuable theoretical and
empir
 
         ical insights to predict consumer behavior relative to mass media
spending
 
          over time.
        Functional Equivalence: The principle of relative constancy cannot be
 
        completely rejected on theoretical grounds because the functional
 
   equivalence assumption can be validated in economic terms.  Functional
 
        equivalence is an important economic concept (product substitution) that
 
          has practical implications for today's electronic media environment.
 
       Consumer electronics firms and media companies in the United States and
 
         other Western countries are poised to market such innovations as
 
  high-definition television and interactive television (as soon as technical
 issues are resolved).  Assuming little expansion of household budgets and
 
          time for mass media in the near future,[9] functional equivalence
would
 
      suggest that "cannibalizing" among electronic media activities and
products
 may reach its full potential in the 1990s, because of the introduction of
 
          new and competing services.  For instance, Levy and Pitsch (1985)
found
 
         that cable TV and the VCR were substitutes.  More recently, a survey
 
      conducted by Broadcasting & Cable indicated that of all cable subscriber
 
          respondents interested in interactive TV (53.8%), nearly half (47.2%)
 
       reported that they would drop some existing cable services to offset the
 
          cost of interactive services (Jessell, 1994).  In the same vein,
prelimin
 
          ary studies suggest that direct broadcast satellite (DBS) service and
cable
 service are competing products, with cable subscribers switching to DBS
 
          for improved signal quality and expanded programming options (e.g.,
Brophy,
 1995).
Methodological Recommendations
        Additional Regressors: If we accept the reasoning for shifting emphasis
 
          away from the PRC to other models of mass media expenditures, it is
 
     imperative to extend mass media expenditures models beyond a simple mass
 
          media expenditures-income relationship, so that we can assess the
impact of
 economic and non-economic predictors on the evolution of mass media
 
      expenditures, as well as forecast short-term mass media spending based on
 
          the values of those predictors.  Whereas the existing PRC research has
 
        ignored the potential influences of variables other than income on mass
 
         media expenditures, future studies should repair this omission by
 
   incorporating such literature-guided independent variables as price,
 
      interest rate, and unemployment rate in models of mass media expenditures.
 If variables that could intervene in the process of consumer spending on
 
          mass media are omitted, the mass media expenditure model is likely to
be
 
          misspecified and produce erroneous estimates.
        Static Versus Dynamic Regression: Future studies should develop dynamic
 
          regression models to assess whether changes in mass media expenditures
 
        react immediately to changes in income (or in other variables) or
whether
 
          the effect of income is spread over several time periods.  A
regression
 
         model is said to be dynamic if it contains a lagged dependent variable;
but
 dynamic behavior patterns are also represented when the model comprises
 
          lagged independent variables (Doran, 1989).  On the other hand, static
 
        models, which best characterize the existing constancy literature, are
 
        those assuming "an instantaneous adjustment to the new equilibrium
values
 
          when prices and income change" (Phlips, 1983, p. 155).  Empirically,
it
 
         means that static models do not contain lagged variables (i.e.,
variables
 
          at time-1, time-2...).  But in reality, consumption, especially
 
 expenditures on such durables as consumer electronics products, often
 
       responds to income changes incrementally over several time
periods--months
 
          or years.  Phlips (1983) has argued that a static approach to
consumption
 
          theory does not really offer a realistic picture of how consumers
react to
 
          increases in income.  In sum, dynamic models should be favored over
static
 
          models because they open the door to new conceptual avenues of mass
media
 
          expenditures research (e.g., testing the permanent income hypothesis
and
 
          rational expectations perspective requires the inclusion of lagged
 
    variables), as well as new statistical approaches to mass media
 
 expenditures modeling (e.g., use of autoregressive and distributed-lag
 
        models).[10]
 
 
 
Notes
 
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    Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, Atlanta,
 
               GA.
Ogan, C., & Kelly, J. (1986, August). Time and money spent on the mass
 
        media in an age of      new communication technologies: A market study.
Paper
 
               presented at the annual convention of the Association for
Education in
 
             Journalism and Mass Communication, Norman, OK.
Ostrom, C. W., Jr. (1990). Time series analysis: Regression techniques (2nd
 ed.). Newbury  Park, CA: Sage.
Phlips, L. (1983). Applied consumption analysis (rev. ed.). Amsterdam:
 
        Elsevier Science.
Pindyck, R. S., & Rubinfeld, D. L. (1991). Econometric models and economic
 
          forecasts (3rd        ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
Robichaux, M. (1993, November 29). Highway of hype: Despite many claims for
 500-channel    TV, long road lies ahead. Wall Street Journal, pp. A1, A5
Robinson, J. P. (1981). Television and leisure time: A new scenario.
 
      Journal of Communication,         31(1), 120-130.
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 McGraw-Hill.
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(University
 
          Microfilms No. 91-05,666)
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          changing market       conditions. Journal of Media Economics, 6(2), 23-36.
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          relative
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             24-30.
 [1] Trends are described as long-term increasing or decreasing move
ments in a time series
 
            (Hanke & Reitsch, 1992).
[2] Positi
ve serial correlation, the most frequently encountered type of serial
 
 
    correlation, occurs when "a positive error in one period....[is]
 associated with a
 
       positive error in the next period" (Pind
yck & Rubinfeld, 1991, p. 49); negative serial
 
           correlation,
 on the other hand, occurs when "negative errors in one time period are
 
 
        associated with positive errors in the next, and vice versa" (
p. 49).
[3] Virtually all U.S. PRC studies use national aggregate data fro
m the Department of
 
          Commerce.  Mass media categories includ
e: (1) newspapers, magazines, and sheet music; (2)
 
            books an
d maps; (3) radio, TV receivers, records, and musical instruments; (4) radi
o and
 
            TV repairs; (5) motion picture admissions; and (6) ot
her admissions (theaters, opera, and
 
            entertainment of non-p
rofit institutions).  Whereas McCombs and his associates performed
 
 
        correlational analyses using these individual categories as well as
 a combination of all
 
            six categories (total mass media), Wo
od ran regression analyses using total mass media
 
           spending
as the only dependent variable.
[4] Negative and positive constant terms i
ndicate increasing and decreasing shares of DPI
 
            devoted to
mass media, respectively.
[5] VCRs, radio sets, TV sets, and musical instr
uments were all included in the electronic
 hardware category.  So this ca
tegory is actually an aggregate of old and new
 
  technologies
.  Typically, national statistical offices provide aggregate data for
 
 
      categories that include several recreational products.  This sit
uation illustrates the
 
           difficulty of isolating VCR expendit
ures from other types of electronic media expenditures
 and assessing its
effect on the overall mass media spending.
[6] A 1989 survey of 7,154 resp
ondents in the Houston metropolitan area revealed that
 
          cabl
e subscribers spent about the same amount of time with the mass media as
 
 
 non-subscribers, supporting the contention that the adoption
of cable TV did not lead to a
 dramatic increase in time spent on the mass
 media (Son, 1990).  Unexpectedly, he also
 
           found that VCR o
wners spent less time with the mass media than non-owners, although time
 
 
            devoted to VCR use was not included in the analysis.
[7] Let
 us assume that the prices of X and Y are kept constant at $1 and $2 per un
it,
 
          respectively.  Figure 1.A shows the budget lines for in
comes of $6, $10, and $20.  With an
 income of $10, a consumer can afford
(1) 10Xs, (2) 5Ys, or (3) a mix of Xs and Ys (e.g.,
 
            4Xs and
 3Xs), as long as the sum of his/her purchases does not exceed $10.  When w
e add
 
            the indifference curves, we can draw the consumer's o
ptima for the three income levels
 
           (for the sake of illustra
tion let us assume that these tangential points represent
 
       q
uantities of 4, 5, and 8Xs, respectively).  For instance, with an income of
 $10, the
 
          optimal consumption level of Xs would be 5; with
an income of $20, an individual would
 
           consume 8Xs.  To esti
mate the Engel curve for X, we report on another graph (quantity of X
 vs.
 income) how many Xs individuals consume for incomes of $6 (4Xs), $10 (5Xs)
, and $20
 
            (8Xs) (Figure 1.B).
[8] Houthakker and Taylor
(1970) estimated the short-term income elasticity (_) for
 
        v
arious media-related expenditure items in the United States: books and maps
, 1.67;
 
        newspapers and magazines, 0.38; radio and televisio
n receivers, records, and musical
 
         instruments, 4.20; radio
and television repair, 0.64; and motion pictures, 0.81.  To
 
 
 illustrate, an income elasticity of 1.67 for books and maps means that whe
n consumers'
 
           income (personal consumption expenditures) inc
reases by 10%, we expect spending on books
 
            and maps to incr
ease by 16.7%.  Long-term elasticity figures (_') were: books and maps,
 
 
 
            1.42; newspapers and magazines, (not reported); radio and tele
vision receivers, records,
 
            and musical instruments, 2.99; r
adio and television repair, 5.20; and motion pictures,
 
           3.41
.  The difference between short-term and long-term elasticity lies in the d
egree of
 
            temporal adjustment needed to respond to income ch
anges. Landsburg (1992) explains:
 
        "Following an increase in
 income, it usually takes time for people to fully adjust their
 
 
     spending patterns.  Thus, we can estimate both a short-run and a long-
run income
 
     elasticity, reflecting an initial partial respon
se to an income increase and the ultimate
 
            full response.  W
e expect the long-run elasticity to exceed the short-run elasticity" (p.
 
 
            109) (see also Thomas, 1987).
[9] It was recently reported t
hat the U.S. average household income in the early 1990s
 
           de
clined by $2,000 from its 1989 level and that consumers had less leisure ti
me in 1989
 
            than in the mid 1980s (Robichaux, 1993).
[10] W
hereas an autoregressive model includes one lagged dependent variable among
 
 
         its predictor variables, a distributed-lag model contains on
e or several
 
          lagged independent variables in the equation (Gu
jarati, 1988).

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