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Chapter 2 SEM

This document provides an introduction to simultaneous equation models and instrumental variables estimation. It discusses how simultaneity causes endogeneity problems that can bias ordinary least squares estimates. Instrumental variables estimation uses excluded exogenous variables, or instruments, to obtain consistent estimates in systems where explanatory variables are jointly determined with the dependent variable. The document explains identification conditions for just-identified systems, gives examples using labor supply and demand, and describes the two-stage least squares estimation procedure for systems with multiple endogenous variables.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
49 views33 pages

Chapter 2 SEM

This document provides an introduction to simultaneous equation models and instrumental variables estimation. It discusses how simultaneity causes endogeneity problems that can bias ordinary least squares estimates. Instrumental variables estimation uses excluded exogenous variables, or instruments, to obtain consistent estimates in systems where explanatory variables are jointly determined with the dependent variable. The document explains identification conditions for just-identified systems, gives examples using labor supply and demand, and describes the two-stage least squares estimation procedure for systems with multiple endogenous variables.
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© © 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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Introduction to Simultaneous

Equation Models

 y1 = a1y2 + b1z1 + u1

 y2 = a2y1 + b2z2 + u2

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha M Meressa 1


Simultaneity
• Simultaneity is a specific type of endogeneity
problem in which the explanatory variable is
jointly determined with the dependent variable

• As with other types of endogeneity, IV


estimation can solve the problem

• Some special issues to consider with


simultaneous equations models (SEM)

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 2


Supply and Demand Example
• Start with an equation you’d like to estimate, say
a labor supply function

• hs = a1w + b1z + u1, where

• w is the wage and z is a supply shifter


• Call this a structural equation – it’s derived from
economic theory and has a causal interpretation
where w directly affects hs

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 3


Example (cont)
• Problem that can’t just regress observed hours
on wage, since observed hours are determined
by the equilibrium of supply and demand

• Consider a second structural equation, in this


case the labor demand function
• hd = a2w + u2

• So hours are determined by a SEM

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 4


Example (cont)
• Both h and w are endogenous because they are
both determined by the equilibrium of supply
and demand

• z is exogenous, and it’s the availability of this


exogenous supply shifter that allows us to
identify the structural demand equation

• With no observed demand shifters, supply is not


identified and cannot be estimated

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 5


Identification of Demand Equation
S (z=z1)
w D
S (z=z2)

S (z=z3)

h
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 6
Using IV to Estimate Demand
• So, we can estimate the structural demand
equation, using z as an instrument for w

• First stage equation is w = p0 + p1z + v2


• Second stage equation is h = a2ŵ + u2

• Thus, 2SLS provides a consistent estimator of a2,


the slope of the demand curve
• We cannot estimate a1, the slope of the supply
curve
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 7
The General SEM
• Suppose you want to estimate the structural
equation: y1 = a1y2 + b1z1 + u1

• where, y2 = a2y1 + b2z2 + u2

• Thus, y2 = a2(a1y2 + b1z1 + u1) + b2z2 + u2


• So, (1 – a2a1)y2 = a2 b1z1 + b2z2 + a2 u1 + u2,
which can be rewritten as
• y2 = p1z1 + p2z2 + v2
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 8
The General SEM (continued)
• By substituting this reduced form in for y2, we
can see that since v2 is a linear function of u1, y2
is correlated with the error term and a1 is
biased – call it simultaneity bias

• The sign of the bias is complicated, but can use


the simple regression as a rule of thumb

• In the simple regression case, the bias is the


same sign as a2/(1 – a2a1)

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 9


Identification of General SEM
• Let z1 be all the exogenous variables in the first
equation, and z2 be all the exogenous variables in
the second equation

• It’s okay for there to be overlap in z1 and z2


• To identify equation 1, there must be some
variables in z2 that are not in z1

• To identify equation 2, there must be some


variables in z1 that are not in z2

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 10


Rank and Order Conditions
• We refer to this as the rank condition

• Note that the exogenous variable excluded from


the first equation must have a non-zero
coefficient in the second equation for the rank
condition to hold

• Note that the order condition clearly holds if the


rank condition does – there will be an exogenous
variable for the endogenous one

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 11


Estimation of the General SEM
• Estimation of SEM is straightforward

• The instruments for 2SLS are the exogenous


variables from both equations

• Can extend the idea to systems with more than 2


equations

• For a given identified equation, the instruments are


all of the exogenous variables in the whole system

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 12


Introduction to Instrumental
Variables & 2SLS
 y = b0 + b1x1 + b2x2 + . . . bkxk + u

 x1 = p0 + p1z + p2x2 + . . . pkxk + v

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 13


Why Use Instrumental Variables?
• Instrumental Variables (IV) estimation is used
when your model has endogenous x’s

• That is, whenever Cov(x,u) ≠ 0

• Thus, IV can be used to address the problem of


omitted variable bias

• Additionally, IV can be used to solve the classic


errors-in-variables problem
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 14
What Is an Instrumental Variable?

• In order for a variable, z, to serve as a valid


instrument for x, the following must be true

• The instrument must be exogenous


• That is, Cov(z,u) = 0

• The instrument must be correlated with the


endogenous variable x

• That is, Cov(z,x) ≠ 0

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 15


More on Valid Instruments
• We have to use common sense and economic
theory to decide if it makes sense to assume
Cov(z,u) = 0

• We can test if Cov(z,x) ≠ 0

• Just testing H0: p1 = 0 in x = p0 + p1z + v


• Sometimes refer to this regression as the first-
stage regression

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 16


IV Estimation in the Simple
Regression Case
• For y = b0 + b1x + u, and given our assumptions

• Cov(z,y) = b1Cov(z,x) + Cov(z,u), so


• b1 = Cov(z,y) / Cov(z,x)
• Then the IV estimator for b1 is

 z  z  y  y 
b̂1  i i

 z  z x  x 
i i

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 17


Inference with IV Estimation

• The homoskedasticity assumption in this case is


E(u2|z) = s2 = Var(u)
• As in the OLS case, given the asymptotic
variance, we can estimate the standard error

  s 2
Var bˆ1 
ns x  x , z
2 2

  sˆ 2
ˆ
se b1 
SSTx Rx2, z
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 18
IV versus OLS estimation
• Standard error in IV case differs from OLS only
in the R2 from regressing x on z

• Since R2 < 1, IV standard errors are larger

• However, IV is consistent, while OLS is


inconsistent, when Cov(x,u) ≠ 0

• The stronger the correlation between z and x,


the smaller the IV standard errors
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 19
The Effect of Poor Instruments

• What if our assumption that Cov(z,u) = 0 is false?


• The IV estimator will be inconsistent, too
• Can compare asymptotic bias in OLS and IV
• Prefer IV if Corr(z,u)/Corr(z,x) < Corr(x,u)

Corr ( z, u ) s u
IV : plim bˆ1  b1  
Corr ( z, x) s x
~ s
OLS : plim b1  b1  Corr ( x, u )  u
sx

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 20


IV Estimation in the Multiple
Regression Case
• IV estimation can be extended to the multiple
regression case

•  interested in estimating the structural model

• Our problem is that one or more of the variables


are endogenous

• We need an instrument for each endogenous


variable

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 21


Multiple Regression IV (cont)
• Write the structural model as y1 = b0 + b1y2 + b2z1
+ u1, where y2 is endogenous and z1 is exogenous

• Let z2 be the instrument, so Cov(z2,u1) = 0 and

• y2 = p0 + p1z1 + p2z2 + v2, where p2 ≠ 0

• This reduced form equation regresses the


endogenous variable on all exogenous ones
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 22
Two Stage Least Squares (2SLS)
• It’s possible to have multiple instruments

• Consider our original structural model, and let:


y2 = p0 + p1z1 + p2z2 + p3z3 + v2

• Here we’re assuming that both z2 and z3 are valid


instruments – they do not appear in the
structural model and are uncorrelated with the
structural error term, u1

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 23


Best Instrument
• Could use either z2 or z3 as an instrument

• The best instrument is a linear combination of all of


the exogenous variables, y2* = p0 + p1z1 + p2z2 + p3z3

• We can estimate y2* by regressing y2 on z1, z2 and z3


 call this the first stage

• If then substitute ŷ2 for y2 in the structural model,


get same coefficient as IV

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 24


More on 2SLS
• While the coefficients are the same, the standard
errors from doing 2SLS by hand are incorrect, so
let Stata do it for you

• Method extends to multiple endogenous


variables – need to be sure that we have at least
as many excluded exogenous variables
(instruments) as there are endogenous variables
in the structural equation

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 25


Addressing Errors-in-Variables
with IV Estimation
• Remember the classical errors-in-variables
problem where we observe x1 instead of x1*

• Where x1 = x1* + e1, and e1 is uncorrelated with


x1* and x2

• If there is a z, such that Corr(z,u) = 0 and


Corr(z,x1) ≠ 0, then

• IV will remove the attenuation bias


Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 26
Testing for Endogeneity
• Since OLS is preferred to IV if we do not have an
endogeneity problem, then we’d like to be able to
test for endogeneity

• If we do not have endogeneity, both OLS and IV


are consistent

• Idea of Hausman test is to see if the estimates


from OLS and IV are different

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 27


Testing for Endogeneity (cont)
• While it’s a good idea to see if IV and OLS have
different implications, it’s easier to use a
regression test for endogeneity

• If y2 is endogenous, then v2 (from the reduced


form equation) and u1 from the structural model
will be correlated

• The test is based on this observation

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 28


Testing for Endogeneity (cont)
• Save the residuals from the first stage

• Include the residual in the structural equation


(which of course has y2 in it)

• If the coefficient on the residual is statistically


different from zero, reject the null of exogeneity.

• If multiple endogenous variables, jointly test the


residuals from each first stage
Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 29
Testing Overidentifying
Restrictions
• If there is just one instrument for our
endogenous variable, we can’t test whether the
instrument is uncorrelated with the error
•  The model is just identified

• If we have multiple instruments, it is possible to


test the overidentifying restrictions – to see if
some of the instruments are correlated with the
error.

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 30


The OverID Test
• Estimate the structural model using IV and
obtain the residuals

• Regress the residuals on all the exogenous


variables and obtain the R2 to form nR2

• Under the null that all instruments are


uncorrelated with the error, LM ~ cq2 where q is
the number of extra instruments

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 31


Testing for Heteroskedasticity
• When using 2SLS, we need a slight adjustment to
the Breusch-Pagan test

• Get the residuals from the IV estimation

• Regress these residuals squared on all of the


exogenous variables in the model (including the
instruments)

• Test for the joint significance


Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 32
Testing for Serial Correlation
• When using 2SLS, we need a slight adjustment to
the test for serial correlation
• Get the residuals from the IV estimation

• Re-estimate the structural model by 2SLS,


including the lagged residuals, and using the
same instruments as originally

Econ 2062 – Dr Abrha Megos Meressa 33

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