TESTING STATIONARITY WITH UNOBSERVED-COMPONENTS MODELS

被引:6
|
作者
Morley, James [1 ]
Panovska, Irina B. [2 ]
Sinclair, Tara M. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[2] Lehigh Univ, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA
[3] George Washington Univ, Washington, DC 20052 USA
关键词
Stationarity Test; Likelihood Ratio; Unobserved Components; Parametric Bootstrap; Monte Carlo Simulation; Small-Sample Inference; BEVERIDGE-NELSON DECOMPOSITION; MAXIMUM-LIKELIHOOD-ESTIMATION; UNIT-ROOT HYPOTHESIS; TIME-SERIES; BUSINESS-CYCLE; OUTPUT FLUCTUATIONS; COVARIANCE-MATRIX; NULL HYPOTHESIS; TREND; REGRESSION;
D O I
10.1017/S1365100515000437
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, competing measures of the trend in macroeconomic variables such as U.S. real GDP have featured prominently in policy debates. A key question is whether large shocks to macroeconomic variables will have permanent effects-i.e., in econometric terms, do the data contain stochastic trends? Unobserved-components models provide a convenient way to estimate stochastic trends for time series data, with their existence typically motivated by stationarity tests that allow at most a deterministic trend under the null hypothesis. However, given the small sample sizes available for most macroeconomic variables, standard Lagrange multiplier tests of stationarity will perform poorly when the data are highly persistent. To address this problem, we propose the use of a likelihood ratio test of stationarity based directly on the unobserved-components models used in estimation of stochastic trends. We demonstrate that a bootstrap version of this test has far better small-sample properties for empirically relevant data-generating processes than bootstrap versions of the standard Lagrange multiplier tests. An application to U.S. real GDP produces stronger support for the presence of large permanent shocks using the likelihood ratio test than using the standard tests.
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页码:160 / 182
页数:23
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