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Heteroskedasticity The Problem:

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Presentation on theme: "Heteroskedasticity The Problem:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Heteroskedasticity The Problem:
Classical assumption of homoskedasticity is violated: V(ei) - not constant When does this happen? Time Series Yields Prices Cross Section consumption patterns firm size - performance (revenue/sales)

2 Food Expenditures versus Income (Before Taxes)
Data Source: 1996 Statistics Canada expenditure survey

3 Heteroskedasticity - Consequences
1) The OLS estimators: Estimators: Linear unbiased Not best (minimum variance) 2) More Problems: OLS variance estimate is incorrect: 3) True variance:

4 Ignoring Heteroskedasticity - Using OLS
1) 2) V(b2) - is not correct 3) Hypothesis tests, confidence intervals, F-tests all invalid 3) Using V(b2)* - correct variance estimator is not best

5 1) Graphical Methods - subjective (residual plots)
DIAGNOSTICS 1) Graphical Methods - subjective (residual plots) > focus on the OLS residuals > is there a pattern ? METHOD Plot residuals Are there patterns? 2) Empirical Tests: Park Test Goldfeld Quandt Test Breusch-Pagan Test White Test

6 1) Graphical Methods: Income and Expenditures

7 PARK 2 STAGE TEST THE TEST
R. E. Park Estimation with Heteroscedastic Error Terms, Econometrica, Vol. 34, No. 4. (Oct., 1966), p. 888. Park proposed the following general hypothesis: The variance of the disturbance increases as the independent variable increases. THE TEST In order to test this hypothesis he proposed the following specific model:

8 if  0 => heteroscedastic
PARK 2 STAGE TEST STEP 1 Run a regression and compute the squared OLS residuals STEP 2 Run the regression equation above: i.e if  0 => heteroscedastic if  = => homoscedastic

9 Issues with the Park Test
1 ) Functional Form 2) What happens if vi is Heteroscedastic ? 3) Power of the Test (Type II error) Accept Ho:  = (homoscedastic) ?? => Perhaps choose   0.10 (significance)

10 Park Test: Example with Income and Food Expenditures
Data: Statistics Canada 1996 Expenditure Survey 1000 observations were selected at random and then the data were trimmed so that income was a minimum of $5000 and a maximum of $300,000. This left 938 observations. Two versions of the Park Test were run: 1) Regress natural log of the squared residuals on the natural log of income before taxes. 2) Regress the squared residuals on income . predict err, residuals . gen e2 = err^2 . gen le2 = ln(e2) . gen libt = ln(ibt)

11 Park Test: Example with Income and Food Expenditures
. regress le2 libt Source | SS df MS Number of obs = F( 1, 936) = Model | Prob > F = Residual | R-squared = Adj R-squared = Total | Root MSE = le2 | Coef. Std. Err t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval] libt | _cons | Conclusion ?

12 Park Test: Example with Income and Food Expenditures
. regress e2 ibt Source | SS df MS Number of obs = F( 1, 936) = Model | e e Prob > F = Residual | e e R-squared = Adj R-squared = Total | e e Root MSE = 2.0e+07 e2 | Coef. Std. Err t P>|t| [95% Conf. Interval] ibt | _cons | Conclusion ?

13 White Test (1980) Test statistic: STEP 1: STEP 2: Test H0:
Regress OLS residuals on regressors + squares + X-products STEP 2: Test H0: Ho: all slope coefficients = 0 (Jointly) e.g. Homoscedastic residuals Test statistic:


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