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'''Jan Kmenta''' (born January 3, 1928) is a Czech-American [[economist]]. He is Professor Emeritus of Economics and Statistics at the University of Michigan, and Visiting Professor at [[CERGE-EI]] in Prague. He currently resides in Sydney, Australia, Prague, Czech Republic and Ann Arbor, Michigan with his wife, award-winning Australian filmmaker Barbara Chobocky. Both of them commute between the three countries because of their professional and family commitments in each.
'''Jan Kmenta''' (born January 3, 1928) is a Czech-American [[economist]]. He is Professor Emeritus of Economics and Statistics at the University of Michigan, and Visiting Professor at [[CERGE-EI]] in Prague. He currently resides in Sydney, Australia, Prague, Czech Republic and Ann Arbor, Michigan with his wife, award-winning Australian filmmaker Barbara Chobocky. Both of them commute between the three countries because of their professional and family commitments in each.

== Academic positions and awards ==
== Academic positions and awards ==
Since earning his PhD in Economics with a minor in Statistics from Stanford under Kenneth Arrow <ref>[Mathematics Genealogy Project http://www.genealogy.ams.org/id.php?id=187396]</ref> in 1964 Kmenta has held academic positions at the University of Wisconsin 1964-65, Michigan State University 1965-73, and the University of Michigan 1973-93 (currently emeritus) and has been a visiting faculty member at universities in five countries. Kmenta has received 24 academic honors, awards, and prizes during his career, beginning with being made a fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1970 and a fellow of the Econometric Society in 1980, and stretching through 2010 when he received the NEURON Award for Lifetime Achievement in Economics.<ref>Jan Kmenta - Curriculum Vitae https://www.cerge-ei.cz/pdf/people/Kmenta.pdf</ref>
Since earning his PhD in Economics with a minor in Statistics from Stanford under Kenneth Arrow <ref>[Mathematics Genealogy Project http://www.genealogy.ams.org/id.php?id=187396]</ref> in 1964 Kmenta has held academic positions at the University of Wisconsin 1964-65, Michigan State University 1965-73, and the University of Michigan 1973-93 (currently emeritus) and has been a visiting faculty member at universities in five countries. Kmenta has received 24 academic honors, awards, and prizes during his career, beginning with being made a fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1970 and a fellow of the Econometric Society in 1980, and stretching through 2010 when he received the NEURON Award for Lifetime Achievement in Economics.<ref>Jan Kmenta - Curriculum Vitae https://www.cerge-ei.cz/pdf/people/Kmenta.pdf</ref>

== Econometric work ==
== Econometric work ==
Kmenta has written extensively on econometric model building as well as econometric methods. He has edited two books with J. B. Ramsey: Evaluation of Econometric Models and Large Scale Macro-Econometric Models: Theory and Practice and is the author of at least 34 <ref>http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jan_Kmenta/publications/2 ]</ref> published econometrics papers. A wide-ranging econometrician, his papers analyze topics as disparate as small sample properties of estimators, missing observations, estimation of production function parameters, and ridge regression among many others.<ref>From references at http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jan_Kmenta/citations]</ref> Much of his published research is focused on econometric issues that are relevant in areas far beyond economics. As a result, his work is referenced in publications in medicine, political science, insurance underwriting, antitrust litigation, and energy issues, to list but a few. For example, the early (1966) “Specification and Estimation of Cobb-Douglas Production Function Models” with A. [[Arnold_Zellner|Zellner]][http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Zellner] and J. Dreze[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Dr%C3%A8ze] has been cited by research as different as family involvement effects on firm productivity and devising fishing gears with reduced environmental effects.
Kmenta has written extensively on econometric model building as well as econometric methods. He has edited two books with J. B. Ramsey: Evaluation of Econometric Models and Large Scale Macro-Econometric Models: Theory and Practice and is the author of at least 34 <ref>[http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jan_Kmenta/publications/2 ]</ref> published econometrics papers. A wide-ranging econometrician, his papers analyze topics as disparate as small sample properties of estimators, missing observations, estimation of production function parameters, and ridge regression among many others.<ref>[http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jan_Kmenta/citations From references at]</ref> Much of his published research is focused on econometric issues that are relevant in areas far beyond economics. As a result, his work is referenced in publications in medicine, political science, insurance underwriting, antitrust litigation, and energy issues, to list but a few. For example, the early (1966) “Specification and Estimation of Cobb-Douglas Production Function Models” with A. [[Arnold Zellner|Zellner]][http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Zellner] and J. Dreze [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Dr%C3%A8ze] has been cited by research as different as family involvement effects on firm productivity and devising fishing gears with reduced environmental effects.
Kmenta’s “General Procedure for Obtaining Maximum Likelihood Estimates in Generalized Regression Models” (with W. Oberhofer) formally established conditions for validity of the iterative estimation method most widely used in econometrics today, while his simplified estimation of the constant elasticity of substitution [[constant elasticity of substitution]] production function both gave “the nascent field of industrial organization a new set of powerful tools for studying firm efficiency”<ref>CERGE-EI [[https://blog.cerge-ei.cz/?p=1227 (direct quotation)]]</ref> and has been used to analyze the cost of network infrastructure,[<ref>Ohio State University dissertation at https://etd.ohiolink.edu/!etd.send_file?accession=osu1070245725&disposition=inline ]</ref> among many other applications.
Kmenta’s “General Procedure for Obtaining Maximum Likelihood Estimates in Generalized Regression Models” (with W. Oberhofer) formally established conditions for validity of the iterative estimation method most widely used in econometrics today, while his simplified estimation of the constant elasticity of substitution [[constant elasticity of substitution]] production function both gave “the nascent field of industrial organization a new set of powerful tools for studying firm efficiency”<ref>CERGE-EI [https://blog.cerge-ei.cz/?p=1227 (direct quotation)]</ref> and has been used to analyze the cost of network infrastructure,[<ref>[https://etd.ohiolink.edu/!etd.send_file?accession=osu1070245725&disposition=inline Ohio State University dissertation at]</ref> among many other applications.
Kmenta has made multiple other contributions incorporated into the core of econometrics.
Kmenta has made multiple other contributions incorporated into the core of econometrics.


There is no doubt, however, that he is best known to the general economics profession around the world for his internationally acclaimed textbook, Elements of Econometrics (titled after [[Euclid's Elements]]) which was first published in 1971 and extensively revised in a 1986 second edition. Having been published in Spanish, Portuguese, Farsi, and Croatian over the years, it is still available in English today.<ref>University of Michigan press https://www.press.umich.edu/15701/elements_of_econometrics]</ref>
There is no doubt, however, that he is best known to the general economics profession around the world for his internationally acclaimed textbook, Elements of Econometrics (titled after [[Euclid's Elements]]) which was first published in 1971 and extensively revised in a 1986 second edition. Having been published in Spanish, Portuguese, Farsi, and Croatian over the years, it is still available in English today.<ref>[https://www.press.umich.edu/15701/elements_of_econometrics University of Michigan press]</ref>
Initially econometrics was centered on providing essentially standalone solutions to particular problems e.g., a useful analytically and econometrically tractable production function such as the Cobb-Douglas, a formal development of the computationally expedient iterative estimation procedure, and a simple way to estimate the parameters of a mathematically complex function (to characterize the Cobb-Douglas, generalized regression, and CES publication examples cited above). As econometrics matured from a collection of clever solutions for specific problems into its own major field of research, econometricians worked to integrate what was known into a systematic whole greater than the sum of its parts. In addition to listing what might be called well-solved problems, they made explicit the implied assumptions underlying them, what can be said if the assumptions are not logically valid, and how to obtain useful results in these cases.
Initially econometrics was centered on providing essentially standalone solutions to particular problems e.g., a useful analytically and econometrically tractable production function such as the Cobb-Douglas, a formal development of the computationally expedient iterative estimation procedure, and a simple way to estimate the parameters of a mathematically complex function (to characterize the Cobb-Douglas, generalized regression, and CES publication examples cited above). As econometrics matured from a collection of clever solutions for specific problems into its own major field of research, econometricians worked to integrate what was known into a systematic whole greater than the sum of its parts. In addition to listing what might be called well-solved problems, they made explicit the implied assumptions underlying them, what can be said if the assumptions are not logically valid, and how to obtain useful results in these cases.
With his focus on econometrics and a strong background in mathematics and statistics Kmenta was a major contributor to this effort. The book embodies the essence of Kmenta’s approach to both econometrics and statistics which is perhaps best – if informally -- characterized as “It’s all very easy once you really understand it – don’t bother memorizing anything, just do the algebra and think about what you are doing and why. Keep things as simple as possible.” Seemingly obvious, this requires a true gift for exposition as well as fundamental understanding. The book chooses its topics precisely, in a careful progression, fully aware of what the reader knows at each point, and it uses the minimal technical tools to fully analyze each issue – slipping seamlessly between scalar and matrix algebra when the point is more clearly made with one or the other, careful to explicitly show the steps needed to derive the result. The exposition is so successful that the book has been used at the PhD level, the Master’s degree level, and even in advanced undergraduate courses. This gift for clarity and exposition also makes Kmenta a legendary teacher, one who is able to convey what might otherwise be daunting concepts in a rigorous but readily accessible manner.
With his focus on econometrics and a strong background in mathematics and statistics Kmenta was a major contributor to this effort. The book embodies the essence of Kmenta’s approach to both econometrics and statistics which is perhaps best – if informally—characterized as “It’s all very easy once you really understand it – don’t bother memorizing anything, just do the algebra and think about what you are doing and why. Keep things as simple as possible.” Seemingly obvious, this requires a true gift for exposition as well as fundamental understanding. The book chooses its topics precisely, in a careful progression, fully aware of what the reader knows at each point, and it uses the minimal technical tools to fully analyze each issue – slipping seamlessly between scalar and matrix algebra when the point is more clearly made with one or the other, careful to explicitly show the steps needed to derive the result. The exposition is so successful that the book has been used at the PhD level, the Master’s degree level, and even in advanced undergraduate courses. This gift for clarity and exposition also makes Kmenta a legendary teacher, one who is able to convey what might otherwise be daunting concepts in a rigorous but readily accessible manner.

== Early life ==
== Early life ==
In addition to the requisite ability and intelligence, Kmenta’s success is a testament to drive and perseverance.<ref>See especially "Jan Kmenta: Goals and Perseverance" on the CERGE-EI Blog at https://blog.cerge-ei.cz/?p=1227</ref> He was a student of statistics at the Czech Technical University in Prague during the 1948 communist coup in Czechoslovakia. After an [http://adventurous%20escape%20https:/blog.cerge-ei.cz/?p=1227 adventurous escape] in September 1949 he spent more than a year in various refugee camps in West Germany before managing to emigrate to Australia in December 1950. Australia was in search of people who would commit to “indentured labour” for two years. The Munich immigration office featured a large poster showing a husky man carrying a bundle of sugar cane with the proclamation “Australia: there is a man’s job for you” thus making it clear that what was wanted were muscles and not brains. Kmenta was assigned to breaking rocks in a stone quarry in Picton (near Sydney). This was a task at which he excelled, managing to get himself fired even in a time of extreme labor shortage so that he could attempt to continue his education. He went to Sydney and met a professor at the Technical College in Ultimo who tested Kmenta’s statistics training and immediately hired him to do statistical calculations. But the employment officer in Sydney would not allow an emigrant to have a job like that and instead sent him to a metal-stamping plant in Balmain. After learning English in less than a year by listening to the radio and puzzling through newspapers with an English/Czech dictionary Kmenta succeeded in obtaining a job emptying and steam-boiling bed pans in a tuberculosis hospital in Randwick. Sydney University was offering evening courses mainly but not exclusively for servicemen in which Kmenta managed to enroll. On the Sydney University campus ethnicity and accent were of no relevance – all that mattered was one’s capability of learning and enjoying the life of the mind. There were several Czechs taking classes, all working during the day to survive. Professor Charles Birch (recently deceased --2015) made them feel welcome and advised them regarding administrative procedures for admission to the university and similar matters. <ref>Sources: CERGE-EI Blog, conversations and email correspondence over the years, and “First Steps in Australia” (Jan Kmenta, unpublished)</ref>
In addition to the requisite ability and intelligence, Kmenta’s success is a testament to drive and perseverance.<ref>See especially "Jan Kmenta: Goals and Perseverance" on the CERGE-EI Blog at https://blog.cerge-ei.cz/?p=1227</ref> He was a student of statistics at the Czech Technical University in Prague during the 1948 communist coup in Czechoslovakia. After an [http://adventurous%20escape%20https:/blog.cerge-ei.cz/?p=1227 adventurous escape] in September 1949 he spent more than a year in various refugee camps in West Germany before managing to emigrate to Australia in December 1950. Australia was in search of people who would commit to “indentured labour” for two years. The Munich immigration office featured a large poster showing a husky man carrying a bundle of sugar cane with the proclamation “Australia: there is a man’s job for you” thus making it clear that what was wanted were muscles and not brains. Kmenta was assigned to breaking rocks in a stone quarry in Picton (near Sydney). This was a task at which he excelled, managing to get himself fired even in a time of extreme labor shortage so that he could attempt to continue his education. He went to Sydney and met a professor at the Technical College in Ultimo who tested Kmenta’s statistics training and immediately hired him to do statistical calculations. But the employment officer in Sydney would not allow an emigrant to have a job like that and instead sent him to a metal-stamping plant in Balmain. After learning English in less than a year by listening to the radio and puzzling through newspapers with an English/Czech dictionary Kmenta succeeded in obtaining a job emptying and steam-boiling bed pans in a tuberculosis hospital in Randwick. Sydney University was offering evening courses mainly but not exclusively for servicemen in which Kmenta managed to enroll. On the Sydney University campus ethnicity and accent were of no relevance – all that mattered was one’s capability of learning and enjoying the life of the mind. There were several Czechs taking classes, all working during the day to survive. Professor Charles Birch (recently deceased—2015) made them feel welcome and advised them regarding administrative procedures for admission to the university and similar matters.<ref>Sources: CERGE-EI Blog, conversations and email correspondence over the years, and “First Steps in Australia” (Jan Kmenta, unpublished)</ref>
From such a tenuous beginning Jan Kmenta received his Bachelor of Economics degree with a minor in Statistics with First Class Honors from the University of Sydney in 1955. He won a Fullbright Scholarship, made his way to the United States and graduated from Stanford University with a Ph.D. in Economics and a minor in Statistics in 1964. At Stanford he was exposed to professors like Kenneth Arrow and Arthur Goldberger who were developing a rigorous approach to economics and econometrics that shaped the rest of his life, and many of his students’ lives as well.
From such a tenuous beginning Jan Kmenta received his Bachelor of Economics degree with a minor in Statistics with First Class Honors from the University of Sydney in 1955. He won a Fullbright Scholarship, made his way to the United States and graduated from Stanford University with a Ph.D. in Economics and a minor in Statistics in 1964. At Stanford he was exposed to professors like Kenneth Arrow and Arthur Goldberger who were developing a rigorous approach to economics and econometrics that shaped the rest of his life, and many of his students’ lives as well.

== Selected works ==
== Selected works ==
* Zellner, Arnold; Kmenta, Jan; Drèze, Jacques (1966). "Specification and Estimation of Cobb–Douglas Production Function Models". Econometrica 34 (4): 784–795. JSTOR 1910099.
* Zellner, Arnold; Kmenta, Jan; Drèze, Jacques (1966). "Specification and Estimation of Cobb–Douglas Production Function Models". Econometrica 34 (4): 784–795. JSTOR 1910099.
Line 54: Line 58:
* Kmenta, J., interviewed by Lodewijks, J. (2005). “The ET Interview: Professor Jan Kmenta” Econometric Theory 21: 621-664.
* Kmenta, J., interviewed by Lodewijks, J. (2005). “The ET Interview: Professor Jan Kmenta” Econometric Theory 21: 621-664.
* Kmenta, J. (2010). “Econometrics: A Failed Science?” International Encyclopedia of Statistical Science Springer Verlag.
* Kmenta, J. (2010). “Econometrics: A Failed Science?” International Encyclopedia of Statistical Science Springer Verlag.

== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}


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| NAME =Kmenta, Jan
| NAME =Kmenta, Jan
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| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American economist
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American economist
| DATE OF BIRTH =January 3, 1928
| DATE OF BIRTH =January 3, 1928
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Prague]], [[Czechoslovakia]]
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| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
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[[Category:Stanford University alumni]]
[[Category:University of Michigan faculty]]
[[Category:University of Michigan faculty]]

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Revision as of 04:50, 5 May 2015

Jan Kmenta
Kmenta at his CERGE-EI office
Born (1928-01-03) January 3, 1928 (age 96)
NationalityUnited States
Czech Republic
Academic career
FieldEconometrics
InstitutionUniversity of Michigan
School or
tradition
Neoclassical economics
Alma materStanford University (PhD, 1964)
University of Sydney (BSc, 1955)
InfluencesKenneth Arrow
Arthur Goldberger
AwardsAlexander von Humboldt Foundation Award
Neuron award for lifetime achievements[1]
Information at IDEAS / RePEc

Jan Kmenta (born January 3, 1928) is a Czech-American economist. He is Professor Emeritus of Economics and Statistics at the University of Michigan, and Visiting Professor at CERGE-EI in Prague. He currently resides in Sydney, Australia, Prague, Czech Republic and Ann Arbor, Michigan with his wife, award-winning Australian filmmaker Barbara Chobocky. Both of them commute between the three countries because of their professional and family commitments in each.

Academic positions and awards

Since earning his PhD in Economics with a minor in Statistics from Stanford under Kenneth Arrow [2] in 1964 Kmenta has held academic positions at the University of Wisconsin 1964-65, Michigan State University 1965-73, and the University of Michigan 1973-93 (currently emeritus) and has been a visiting faculty member at universities in five countries. Kmenta has received 24 academic honors, awards, and prizes during his career, beginning with being made a fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1970 and a fellow of the Econometric Society in 1980, and stretching through 2010 when he received the NEURON Award for Lifetime Achievement in Economics.[3]

Econometric work

Kmenta has written extensively on econometric model building as well as econometric methods. He has edited two books with J. B. Ramsey: Evaluation of Econometric Models and Large Scale Macro-Econometric Models: Theory and Practice and is the author of at least 34 [4] published econometrics papers. A wide-ranging econometrician, his papers analyze topics as disparate as small sample properties of estimators, missing observations, estimation of production function parameters, and ridge regression among many others.[5] Much of his published research is focused on econometric issues that are relevant in areas far beyond economics. As a result, his work is referenced in publications in medicine, political science, insurance underwriting, antitrust litigation, and energy issues, to list but a few. For example, the early (1966) “Specification and Estimation of Cobb-Douglas Production Function Models” with A. Zellner[2] and J. Dreze [3] has been cited by research as different as family involvement effects on firm productivity and devising fishing gears with reduced environmental effects. Kmenta’s “General Procedure for Obtaining Maximum Likelihood Estimates in Generalized Regression Models” (with W. Oberhofer) formally established conditions for validity of the iterative estimation method most widely used in econometrics today, while his simplified estimation of the constant elasticity of substitution constant elasticity of substitution production function both gave “the nascent field of industrial organization a new set of powerful tools for studying firm efficiency”[6] and has been used to analyze the cost of network infrastructure,[[7] among many other applications. Kmenta has made multiple other contributions incorporated into the core of econometrics.

There is no doubt, however, that he is best known to the general economics profession around the world for his internationally acclaimed textbook, Elements of Econometrics (titled after Euclid's Elements) which was first published in 1971 and extensively revised in a 1986 second edition. Having been published in Spanish, Portuguese, Farsi, and Croatian over the years, it is still available in English today.[8] Initially econometrics was centered on providing essentially standalone solutions to particular problems e.g., a useful analytically and econometrically tractable production function such as the Cobb-Douglas, a formal development of the computationally expedient iterative estimation procedure, and a simple way to estimate the parameters of a mathematically complex function (to characterize the Cobb-Douglas, generalized regression, and CES publication examples cited above). As econometrics matured from a collection of clever solutions for specific problems into its own major field of research, econometricians worked to integrate what was known into a systematic whole greater than the sum of its parts. In addition to listing what might be called well-solved problems, they made explicit the implied assumptions underlying them, what can be said if the assumptions are not logically valid, and how to obtain useful results in these cases. With his focus on econometrics and a strong background in mathematics and statistics Kmenta was a major contributor to this effort. The book embodies the essence of Kmenta’s approach to both econometrics and statistics which is perhaps best – if informally—characterized as “It’s all very easy once you really understand it – don’t bother memorizing anything, just do the algebra and think about what you are doing and why. Keep things as simple as possible.” Seemingly obvious, this requires a true gift for exposition as well as fundamental understanding. The book chooses its topics precisely, in a careful progression, fully aware of what the reader knows at each point, and it uses the minimal technical tools to fully analyze each issue – slipping seamlessly between scalar and matrix algebra when the point is more clearly made with one or the other, careful to explicitly show the steps needed to derive the result. The exposition is so successful that the book has been used at the PhD level, the Master’s degree level, and even in advanced undergraduate courses. This gift for clarity and exposition also makes Kmenta a legendary teacher, one who is able to convey what might otherwise be daunting concepts in a rigorous but readily accessible manner.

Early life

In addition to the requisite ability and intelligence, Kmenta’s success is a testament to drive and perseverance.[9] He was a student of statistics at the Czech Technical University in Prague during the 1948 communist coup in Czechoslovakia. After an adventurous escape in September 1949 he spent more than a year in various refugee camps in West Germany before managing to emigrate to Australia in December 1950. Australia was in search of people who would commit to “indentured labour” for two years. The Munich immigration office featured a large poster showing a husky man carrying a bundle of sugar cane with the proclamation “Australia: there is a man’s job for you” thus making it clear that what was wanted were muscles and not brains. Kmenta was assigned to breaking rocks in a stone quarry in Picton (near Sydney). This was a task at which he excelled, managing to get himself fired even in a time of extreme labor shortage so that he could attempt to continue his education. He went to Sydney and met a professor at the Technical College in Ultimo who tested Kmenta’s statistics training and immediately hired him to do statistical calculations. But the employment officer in Sydney would not allow an emigrant to have a job like that and instead sent him to a metal-stamping plant in Balmain. After learning English in less than a year by listening to the radio and puzzling through newspapers with an English/Czech dictionary Kmenta succeeded in obtaining a job emptying and steam-boiling bed pans in a tuberculosis hospital in Randwick. Sydney University was offering evening courses mainly but not exclusively for servicemen in which Kmenta managed to enroll. On the Sydney University campus ethnicity and accent were of no relevance – all that mattered was one’s capability of learning and enjoying the life of the mind. There were several Czechs taking classes, all working during the day to survive. Professor Charles Birch (recently deceased—2015) made them feel welcome and advised them regarding administrative procedures for admission to the university and similar matters.[10] From such a tenuous beginning Jan Kmenta received his Bachelor of Economics degree with a minor in Statistics with First Class Honors from the University of Sydney in 1955. He won a Fullbright Scholarship, made his way to the United States and graduated from Stanford University with a Ph.D. in Economics and a minor in Statistics in 1964. At Stanford he was exposed to professors like Kenneth Arrow and Arthur Goldberger who were developing a rigorous approach to economics and econometrics that shaped the rest of his life, and many of his students’ lives as well.

Selected works

  • Zellner, Arnold; Kmenta, Jan; Drèze, Jacques (1966). "Specification and Estimation of Cobb–Douglas Production Function Models". Econometrica 34 (4): 784–795. JSTOR 1910099.
  • Kmenta, Jan (1967). “On Estimation of the CES Production Function” International Economic Review 8 (2) available on http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/91902/Kmenta-Estimation_CES_Production_Function.pdf?sequence=1
  • Kmenta, J.; Gilbert, R (1968). “Small Sample Properties of Alternative Estimators of Seemingly Unrelated Regressions” Journal of the American Statistical Association 1180-1200.
  • Kmenta, J.; Gilbert, R (1970). “Estimation of Seemingly Unrelated Regressions with Autoregressive Disturbances, Journal of the American Statistical Association 186-197.
  • Kmenta, J. (1971, revised ed. 1986). Elements of Econometrics. New York: Macmillan. (Original edition also available in Spanish, Portuguese, Farsi, and Croatian)
  • Kmenta, J.: Kreinin, M.E., Ramsey, J.B. (1971). “Factor Substitution and Effective Protection Reconsidered” American Economic Review 61: 891-900.
  • Kmenta, J.; Oberhofer, W. (1973). “Estimation of Standard Errors of the Characteristic Roods of Dynamic Econometric Models” Econometrica 41: 171-177.
  • Kmenta, J.; Smith, P.E. (1973). “Autonomous Expenditures versus Money Supply: An Application of Dynamic Multipliers” Review of Economics and Statistics 55: 229-307.
  • Kmenta, Jan; Oberhofer, W. (1974)“General Procedure for Obtaining Maximum Likelihood Estimates in Generalized Regression Models” Econometrica 42: 572-590 available on http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/handle/2027.42/91915
  • Kmenta, J.; Benus, J.; Shapiro, H. (1976). “The Dynamics of Household Budget Allocation to Food Expenditures” Review of Economics and Statistics 58: 129-138.
  • Kmenta, J.; Ramsey, James B., eds. (1981). Large-Scale Macro-Econometric Models: Theory and Practice. New York: North-Holland. ISBN 0-444-86295-1.
  • Kmenta, Jan, Lin, Karl (1982). “Ridge Regression Under Alternative Loss Criteria” Review of Economics and Statistics 64: 488-494.
  • Kmenta, Jan, Doran, H. E. (1986). “A Lack-of-fit Test for Econometric Applications to Cross-section Data” Review of Economics and Statistics 68: 346-350.
  • Kmenta, J., Marikova, E.M. (1987). “On the Similarity of Macro-Econometric Models of Market and Planned Economies: The First Models of Czechoslovakia” Comparative Economic Studies29.
  • Keener, Robert W.; Kmenta, Jan; Weber, Neville C. (1991). "Estimation of the Covariance Matrix of the Least-Squares Regression Coefficients When the Disturbance Covariance Matrix Is of Unknown Form" Econometric Theory7 (1): 22–45. doi:10.1017/S0266466600004229.
  • Kmenta, J., interviewed by Lodewijks, J. (2005). “The ET Interview: Professor Jan Kmenta” Econometric Theory 21: 621-664.
  • Kmenta, J. (2010). “Econometrics: A Failed Science?” International Encyclopedia of Statistical Science Springer Verlag.

References

  1. ^ 'Jan Kmenta: Goals and Perseverance'
  2. ^ [Mathematics Genealogy Project http://www.genealogy.ams.org/id.php?id=187396]
  3. ^ Jan Kmenta - Curriculum Vitae https://www.cerge-ei.cz/pdf/people/Kmenta.pdf
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ From references at
  6. ^ CERGE-EI (direct quotation)
  7. ^ Ohio State University dissertation at
  8. ^ University of Michigan press
  9. ^ See especially "Jan Kmenta: Goals and Perseverance" on the CERGE-EI Blog at https://blog.cerge-ei.cz/?p=1227
  10. ^ Sources: CERGE-EI Blog, conversations and email correspondence over the years, and “First Steps in Australia” (Jan Kmenta, unpublished)

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