Specification Test: Vid Adrison
Specification Test: Vid Adrison
Vid Adrison
Outline
Redundant Variable Omitted Variable Functional Specification Selection Criteria
Redundant Variable
Consequences
Simulation is useful as we know the true value of the parameter Assume that Qx is only a function of Px and Income Generate 200 data of Px, Py, INC, and Error via random draw In excel the syntax is =rand() Generate log(Qx)= 0.5-0.5*log(Px)+0.5*log(INC)+Error Run log(Qx)=f[log(Px), log(INC)] The parameter will be closer to the assigned values, as the number of draws increase
Repeating the above procedure for N times and get the average values of the parameter Monte Carlo Simulation As the comparison, run log(Qx)=f[log(Px), log(Py), log(INC)], see how the parameter changes
Redundant Variable
This procedure is the same as omitted variable test, thus, the hypotheses remain the same
Basically, omitted variable/redundant variable test are performed by comparing the likelihood ratio between restricted and unrestricted model
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Omitted Variable
Consequences
For two variable-model, the sign of bias depends on the correlation between excluded variable and included variable
Corr (X1, X2) > 0 Positive Bias Negative Bias Corr(X1, X2)<0 Negative Bias Positive Bias
B2 > 0 B2 < 0
The direction of bias can be more complicated if we have three or more regressors See Wooldridge Chapter 3 for detail derivation
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Test Equation: Dependent Variable: LOG(QX) Method: Least Squares Date: 02/23/10 Time: 23:52 Sample: 1 60 Included observations: 60 Variable C LOG(PX) LOG(INC) R-squared Adjusted R-squared S.E. of regression Sum squared resid Log likelihood Durbin-Watson stat Coefficient 0.970042 -0.525034 0.514221 0.828189 0.822161 0.305112 5.306335 -12.37302 2.276588 Std. Error 0.095809 0.035679 0.045908 t-Statistic 10.12477 -14.71562 11.20119 Prob. 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 1.237024 0.723513 0.512434 0.617151 137.3802 0.000000
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
For Keynesian consumption function, it reflects autonomous consumption; the amount of consumption one will have if his/her income is zero Some have no (logical) economic interpretation:
I.e., production function (K=0, L=0 will definitely lead to Y=0, demand function (price should be in the positive domain)
It is essentially dropping vector of ONE in the matrix notation Is it the correct treatment ???
One of several role of an intercept is to ensure zero conditional mean on error Example of violation;
True Consumption = B0 + B1*Income + error If consumption is measured incorrectly, such as, understatement; such that
Observed consumption = True consumption understatement The regression would be; Observed Consumption = B0 + B1*Income + error understatement If we dont include B0, then E (error understatement) is different from zero Bias in B1 If we include B0, B1 is not biased
Cost of using intercept if B0 is truly zero None Cost of deleting intercept if B0 is not zero Biased in slope parameter
Dependent Variable: LOG(QX) Method: Least Squares Date: 02/23/10 Time: 18:18 Sample: 1 60 Included observations: 60 Variable LOG(PX) LOG(INC) R-squared Adjusted R-squared S.E. of regression Sum squared resid Log likelihood Coefficient -0.429977 0.873992 0.519198 0.510909 0.505989 14.84945 -43.24485 Std. Error 0.057083 0.048203 t-Statistic -7.532469 18.13144 Prob. 0.0000 0.0000 1.237024 0.723513 1.508162 1.577973 1.730641
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion Durbin-Watson stat
Functional Specification
What to choose:
Nested Model: A Vs B, or C Vs D
Ramsey RESET
Basically add the polynomial of expected value as the regressor, as the proxy for unaccounted variable If adding this proxy variable leads to significant increase in adjusted R square, the regression contains misspecification
H0: No misspecification error H1: Model contains specification error
Steps in Eviews: View | Stability Test | Ramsey RESET test | (Include number of polynomial variable) | OK
Ramsey RESET Test: F-statistic Log likelihood ratio 0.784074 0.834253 Probability Probability 0.379684 0.361046
Test Equation: Dependent Variable: LOG(QX) Method: Least Squares Date: 02/24/10 Time: 00:33 Sample: 1 60 Included observations: 60 Variable C LOG(PX) LOG(INC) FITTED^2 R-squared Adjusted R-squared S.E. of regression Sum squared resid Log likelihood Durbin-Watson stat Ramsey RESET Test: F-statistic Log likelihood ratio 4.159492 4.298853 Probability Probability 0.046131 0.038138 Coefficient 1.088893 -0.601195 0.550684 -0.043772 0.830562 0.821485 0.305692 5.233065 -11.95589 2.255349 Std. Error 0.165015 0.093144 0.061735 0.049433 t-Statistic 6.598762 -6.454500 8.920113 -0.885480 Prob. 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.3797 1.237024 0.723513 0.531863 0.671486 91.50122 0.000000
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Test Equation: Dependent Variable: LOG(QX) Method: Least Squares Date: 02/24/10 Time: 00:34 Sample: 1 60 Included observations: 60 Variable C PX INC FITTED^2 R-squared Adjusted R-squared S.E. of regression Sum squared resid Log likelihood Durbin-Watson stat Coefficient 0.502144 0.005691 -0.004399 0.413044 0.543989 0.519560 0.501494 14.08379 -41.65671 2.432008 Std. Error 0.492582 0.080800 0.042664 0.202524 t-Statistic 1.019413 0.070429 -0.103115 2.039483 Prob. 0.3124 0.9441 0.9182 0.0461 1.237024 0.723513 1.521890 1.661513 22.26804 0.000000
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Functional Specification
Dependent Variable: LOG(QX) Method: Least Squares Date: 02/24/10 Time: 00:55 Sample: 1 60 Included observations: 60 Variable C LOG(PX) LOG(INC) PX INC R-squared Adjusted R-squared S.E. of regression Sum squared resid Log likelihood Durbin-Watson stat Wald Test: Equation: Untitled Null Hypothesis: C(4)=0 C(5)=0 F-statistic Chi-square Wald Test: Equation: Untitled Null Hypothesis: C(2)=0 C(3)=0 F-statistic Chi-square 53.70023 107.4005 Probability Probability 0.000000 0.000000 0.978447 1.956895 Probability Probability 0.382341 0.375894 Coefficient 1.047136 -0.490712 0.604477 -0.017596 -0.024155 0.834092 0.822026 0.305228 5.124023 -11.32417 2.314130 Std. Error 0.119279 0.064609 0.083606 0.025031 0.018644 t-Statistic 8.778901 -7.595069 7.230085 -0.702977 -1.295620 Prob. 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.4850 0.2005 1.237024 0.723513 0.544139 0.718668 69.12739 0.000000
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Functional Specification
Davidson-MacKinnon (1981)
Use the similar principle as Ramsey, but different predicted values Recall
Spec A: ln(Qx)=f(Px, INC) Spec C: ln(Qx)=f(ln(Px), ln(INC))
Dependent Variable: LOG(QX) Method: Least Squares Date: 02/24/10 Time: 00:59 Sample: 1 60 Included observations: 60 Variable C PX INC Z1 R-squared Adjusted R-squared S.E. of regression Sum squared resid Log likelihood Durbin-Watson stat Coefficient 0.038918 0.000279 -0.008157 1.021596 0.829783 0.820665 0.306393 5.257103 -12.09338 2.239382 Std. Error 0.176320 0.020148 0.013027 0.099618 t-Statistic 0.220726 0.013860 -0.626168 10.25511 Prob. 0.8261 0.9890 0.5337 0.0000 1.237024 0.723513 0.536446 0.676069 90.99747 0.000000
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Dependent Variable: LOG(QX) Method: Least Squares Date: 02/24/10 Time: 01:01 Sample: 1 60 Included observations: 60 Variable C LOG(PX) LOG(INC) Z2 R-squared Adjusted R-squared S.E. of regression Sum squared resid Log likelihood Durbin-Watson stat Coefficient 1.001958 -0.534508 0.522164 -0.027657 0.828332 0.819136 0.307697 5.301924 -12.34807 2.265905 Std. Error 0.176638 0.056757 0.059141 0.128139 t-Statistic 5.672389 -9.417454 8.829176 -0.215839 Prob. 0.0000 0.0000 0.0000 0.8299 1.237024 0.723513 0.544936 0.684559 90.07041 0.000000
Mean dependent var S.D. dependent var Akaike info criterion Schwarz criterion F-statistic Prob(F-statistic)
Selection Criteria
According to Hendry and Richard (1983), a model chosen for empirical analysis should satisfy the following criteria:
Admissible (prediction made from the model must be logically possible) Consistent with theory: Make economic good sense Have weakly exogenous explanatory variables: Regressors are uncorrelated with the error terms Constancy: The values of the parameters should be stable. In other word, the parameter values obtained using within sample observation should not deviate significantly from outside sample observation. Coherency: Residuals estimated from the model must be purely random Encompassing: No other model explains better
Selection Criteria
Three statistics for model evaluation criteria available in most econometric software are;
Adjusted R-Squared Choose model that generates the highest Adjusted R squared Akaike Information Criterion Choose model that generates the smallest AIC Schwarz Information Criterion Choose model that generates the smallest SIC