The Implementation and Constructive Use of Misspecification Tests in Econometrics


Book Description

This is a collection of papers co-authored by members of the Department of Economics and Related Studies and the Institute for Research in the Social Sciences at the University of York, which deals with methods for calculating asymptotically valid tests for use with samples of the size available in empirical economics. The papers also address the scope for using test statistics to determine the nature of specification errors and for providing suitable corrections to estimates or parameters.




Bootstrap Tests for Regression Models


Book Description

An accessible discussion examining computationally-intensive techniques and bootstrap methods, providing ways to improve the finite-sample performance of well-known asymptotic tests for regression models. This book uses the linear regression model as a framework for introducing simulation-based tests to help perform econometric analyses.




Handbook of Applied Economic Statistics


Book Description

This work examines theoretical issues, as well as practical developments in statistical inference related to econometric models and analysis. This work offers discussions on such areas as the function of statistics in aggregation, income inequality, poverty, health, spatial econometrics, panel and survey data, bootstrapping and time series.




Computational Econometrics


Book Description

This publication contains a substantial amount of detail about the broad history of the development of econometric software based on the personal recollections of many people. For economists, the computer has increasingly become the primary applied research tool, and it is software that makes the computer work.




Working Papers in Economics and Econometrics


Book Description







Misspecification Tests in Econometrics


Book Description

Misspecification tests play an important role in detecting unreliable and inadequate economic models. This book brings together many results from the growing literature in econometrics on misspecification testing. It provides theoretical analyses and convenient methods for application. The main emphasis is on the Lagrange multiplier principle, which provides considerable unification, although several other approaches are also considered. The author also examines general checks for model adequacy that do not involve formulation of an alternative hypothesis. General and specific tests are discussed in the context of multiple regression models, systems of simultaneous equations, and models with qualitative or limited dependent variables.