Identification and Inference for Econometric Models


Book Description

This 2005 volume contains the papers presented in honor of the lifelong achievements of Thomas J. Rothenberg on the occasion of his retirement. The authors of the chapters include many of the leading econometricians of our day, and the chapters address topics of current research significance in econometric theory. The chapters cover four themes: identification and efficient estimation in econometrics, asymptotic approximations to the distributions of econometric estimators and tests, inference involving potentially nonstationary time series, such as processes that might have a unit autoregressive root, and nonparametric and semiparametric inference. Several of the chapters provide overviews and treatments of basic conceptual issues, while others advance our understanding of the properties of existing econometric procedures and/or propose others. Specific topics include identification in nonlinear models, inference with weak instruments, tests for nonstationary in time series and panel data, generalized empirical likelihood estimation, and the bootstrap.




Optimal Inference in Regression Models with Nearly Integrated Regressors


Book Description

This paper considers the problem of conducting inference on the regression coefficient in a bivariate regression model with a highly persistent regressor. Gaussian power envelopes are obtained for a class of testing procedures satisfying a conditionality restriction. In addition, the paper proposes feasible testing procedures that attain these Gaussian power envelopes whether or not the innovations of the regression model are normally distributed.




Mathematical Reviews


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Robust Inference in Econometrics with Applications to Time Series and Panel Data Models


Book Description

Abstract: Having robust methods of inference is important in econometrics to achieve reliable results. This thesis tackles robustness issues in three different contexts: structural change in panel data robust to a short transition period, inference on the mean of a time series robust to the so-called ill-posed problem, inference on the slope of a trend function robust to the stationary or integrated nature of the noise component. Chapter 1 considers testing for and estimating an unknown structural break date in panel data models in the presence of individual specific effects and serial correlation for both short and long panels. I allow for a time varying effect after a regime change in the form of a short transition period. A statistic that has a pivotal limit distribution under a standard asymptotic framework is proposed. It is shown to be robust to the transition period. The usefulness of the method is illustrated via simulations and empirical applications. Chapter 2 deals with the relevance of so-called impossibility results in the context of estimating the spectral density function of a stationary process at the zero frequency. As shown previously, any estimate will have an infinite minimax risk. Most often it is a nuisance parameter of which an estimate is needed to obtain test statistics that have a pivotal distribution. In this context, I argue that such an impossibility result is irrelevant. I show that, in the presence of the discontinuities that cause the ill-posedness problem, using the true value leads to tests that have either 0 or 100% size and, hence, lead to confidence intervals that are completely uninformative. On the other hand, tests based on standard estimates will have well defined limit distributions and, accordingly, be more informative and robust. Chapter 3 is concerned with inference on the slope of the trend function of a time series whose noise component can be stationary or integrated. I focus on a procedure suggested by Perron and Yabu (2009). I prove that it has the correct size uniformly over the specified parameter space but that it is not uniformly asymptotically similar.




Finance India


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Robust Inference Using Higher Order Influence Functions


Book Description

We present a theory of point and interval estimation for nonlinear functionals in parametric, semi-, and non-parametric models based on higher order influence functions (Robins 2004, Sec. 9, Li et al., 2006, Tchetgen et al., 2006, Robins et al., 2007). Higher order influence functions are higher order U-statistics. Our theory extends the first order semiparametric theory of Bickel et al. (1993) and van der Vaart (1991) by incorporating the theory of higher order scores considered by Pfanzagl (1990), Small and McLeish (1994), and Lindsay and Waterman (1996). The theory reproduces many previous results, produces new non- n results, and opens up the ability to perform optimal non- n inference in complex high dimensional models. We present novel rate-optimal point and interval estimators for various functionals of central importance to biostatistics in settings in which estimation at the expected n rate is not possible, owing to the curse of dimensionality. We also show that our higher order influence functions have a multi-robustness property that extends the double robustness property of first order influence functions described by Robins and Rotnitzky (2001) and van der Laan and Robins (2003).







Integrated Uncertainty in Knowledge Modelling and Decision Making


Book Description

This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 98th International Symposium on Integrated Uncertainty in Knowledge Modelling and Decision Making, IUKM 2021, held in Ishikawa, Japan, in March 2022. The 30 full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 46 submissions. The papers deal with all aspects of uncertainty modelling and management and are organized in topical sections on uncertainty management and decision making, optimization and statistical methods, pattern classification and data analysis, machine learning, and economic applications.