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MSC Econometrics (Ec402) : 2021-2022 Answers To Problem Set #6

The document discusses the normal linear regression model (NLRM) and asymptotic linear regression model (ANLRM). Under the NLRM, the OLS estimator is distributed as a normal distribution and test statistics like t-statistics and F-statistics follow chi-squared and F distributions. Under the ANLRM as the sample size grows large but remains finite, the distributions approximate the NLRM. As the sample size goes to infinity, the distributions converge to their asymptotic forms. The document also notes that while test statistics approach normal and chi-squared distributions asymptotically, econometricians still recommend using t and F distributions in practice for more conservative test results even with large samples.

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Yash Patel
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views3 pages

MSC Econometrics (Ec402) : 2021-2022 Answers To Problem Set #6

The document discusses the normal linear regression model (NLRM) and asymptotic linear regression model (ANLRM). Under the NLRM, the OLS estimator is distributed as a normal distribution and test statistics like t-statistics and F-statistics follow chi-squared and F distributions. Under the ANLRM as the sample size grows large but remains finite, the distributions approximate the NLRM. As the sample size goes to infinity, the distributions converge to their asymptotic forms. The document also notes that while test statistics approach normal and chi-squared distributions asymptotically, econometricians still recommend using t and F distributions in practice for more conservative test results even with large samples.

Uploaded by

Yash Patel
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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London School of Economics Vassilis Hajivassiliou

Department of Economics Michaelmas Term 2021

MSc Econometrics (Ec402)


2021–2022
Answers to Problem Set #6

1. .

(a) Including all 4 guaranteed income dummies would cause perfect collinearity among
the regressors leading to singularity in X ′ X (the “dummy variable trap”) since
for every i, d1i + d2i + d3i + d4i = 1.
(b) The Ehi part of equations (2) and (3) are equivalent, since they differ by a non-
singular transformation:
E(hi |d1i , x2i ) formulation (2) formulation (3)
d1i = 1 β0 γ θ1 δ
d2i = 1 β0 + β2 γ θ2 δ
d3i = 1 β0 + β3 γ θ3 δ
d4i = 1 β0 + β4 γ θ4 δ
As a result, γ = δ, β0 = θ1 , β0 + β2 = θ2 , β0 + β3 = θ3 , and β0 + β4 = θ4 .

2. .

(a) Let the number of observations in quarter q, q = 1, 2, 3, 4 be Tq with T = 4q=1 Tq .
 
T1 0 0 0
 0 T2 0 0 
Given the definition of the seasonal dummies, S ′ S =  

 and
 0 0 T3 0 
0 0 0 T4
∑ ∑ ∑ ∑ ′
S ′ z = ( i∈q1 zi z
i∈q2 i z
i∈q3 i z
i∈q4 i ) . Thus
∑ 
i∈q1 zi
1 1 1 1 ∑ z 
 
MS z = z − S · diag( , , , ) ·  ∑i∈q2 i  = z − z̄ (q) ,
T1 T2 T3 T4  z 
∑i∈q3 i
i∈q4 zi
where z̄ (q) is the T × 1 vector with ith element the sample average of all the
observations from the quarter i belongs to.
(b) From partitioned regression results, we know that in ŷ = S β̂1 +X2 β̂2 the estimated
vector

β̂2 = (X2′ MS X2 )−1 X2′ MS y = ((MS X2 )′ MS X2 )−1 (MS X2 )′ MS y

by the idempotency and symmetry of MS . This corresponds to regressing MS y


on MS X2 , i.e., deseasonalized y on deseasonalized X2 .

1
3. Explain what we mean by the “Normal Linear Regression Model (NLRM)”.

NLRM-A4GM: β̂ols |X ∼ N (β true , σ 2 (X ′ X)−1 )


NLRM-A4Omega: β̂ols |X ∼ N (β true , c2 (X ′ X)−1 X ′ ΩX(X ′ X)−1 )
Outline the conditions that characterize this model.
NLRM-A4GM: A1 + A2 + A3Rmi or stronger A3 + A4GM (iid) + A5Gaussian
NLRM-A4Omega: A1 + A2 + A3Rmi or stronger A3 + A4Ω + A5Gaussian
Repeat with the term “Asymptotic Linear Regression Model (ANLRM)”.
Part 1: If “A” is taken to mean “Approximate NLRM for very large, *finite*
sample size S”
ANLRM-A4GM: β̂ols |X ≈ N (β true , σ 2 (X ′ X)−1 )
ANLRM-A4Omega: β̂ols |X ≈ N (β true , c2 (X ′ X)−1 X ′ ΩX(X ′ X)−1 )
Outline the conditions that characterize this model.
ANLRM-A4GM: A1 + A2+ A3Rsru or stronger (i.e., *any* of the 7 versions of
A3) + A4GM (iid) + S very large.
ANLRM-A4Omega: A1 + A2 + A3Rsru or stronger (i.e., *any* of the 7 versions
of A3) + A4Ω + S very large.
Part 2: If “A” is taken to mean “Asymptotic NLRM for sample size S
growing unboundedly large (i.e., limits as S → ∞)”
ANLRM-A4GM:

( ( ))−1 
√ d ′
X X
S(β̂ols − β true ) → N 0, σ p lim
2 
S
S→∞

ANLRM-A4Omega:
 ( ( ))−1  ( ) ( ( ))−1 
√ d ′ ′ ′
XX X ΩX  XX
S(β̂ols −β true ) → N 0, c2  p lim  p lim p lim 
S S S
S→∞

Outline the conditions that characterize this model.


ANLRM-A4GM: A1 + A2+ A3Rsru or stronger (i.e., *any* of the 7 versions of
A3) + A4GM (iid) + S → ∞.
ANLRM-A4Omega: A1 + A2 + A3Rsru or stronger (i.e., *any* of the 7 versions
of A3) + A4Ω + S → ∞.

2
(a) Based on the NLRM, discuss which quantities will be distributed as χ2 (·) and
which as F (·, ·).
These distributional results are discussed on pages 94-96 of the Sup-
plementary Technical Notes of the Coursepack.
The three pages are appended to these answers here.
(b) Will the same two distributions be relevant for the case of the ANLRM?
As S → ∞, the random variables that are in the denominators of the t-statistic
and of the F-statistic will converges to something fixed — this is because the
denominators contain the estimated s2ols which converges asymptotically to the
true σ 2 — you can also see this from the fact that the t-statistic will be distributed
t(S − k) and the F-statistic will be F (r, S − k). As S → ∞,
t(S − k) → t(∞) = N (0, 1)
F (r, S − k) → F (r, ∞) = χ2 (r)/r
In practice, econometricians recommend still using the t(.) and F (., .) distributions
even for very large S, because the resulting rejection regions are more conservative
compared to their N (0, 1) and χ2 (r) approximations.


c Vassilis Hajivassiliou, LSE 2000-2021

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