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# Econometrics Toolbox

## Time Series Regression VIII: Lagged Variables and Estimator Bias

This example shows how lagged predictors affect least-squares estimation of multiple linear regression models. It is the eighth in a series of examples on time series regression, following the presentation in previous examples.

Introduction

Many econometric models are dynamic, using lagged variables to incorporate feedback over time. By contrast, static time series models represent systems that respond exclusively to current events.

Lagged variables come in several types:

Distributed Lag (DL) variables are lagged values of observed exogenous predictor variables .

Autoregressive (AR) variables are lagged values of observed endogenous response variables .

Moving Average (MA) variables are lagged values of unobserved stochastic innovations processes .

Dynamic models are often constructed using linear combinations of different types of lagged variables, to create ARMA, ARDL, and other hybrids. The modeling goal, in each case, is to reflect important interactions among relevant economic factors, accurately and concisely.

Dynamic model specifications ask the question: Which lags are important? Some models, such as seasonal models, use lags at distinct periods in the data. Other models base their lag structure on theoretical considerations of how, and when, economic agents react to changing conditions. In general, lag structures identify the time delay of the response to known leading indicators.

However, lag structures must do more than just represent the available theory. Because dynamic specifications produce interactions among variables that can affect standard regression techniques, lag structures must also be designed with accurate model estimation in mind.

Specification Issues

Consider the multiple linear regression (MLR) model:

where is an observed response, includes columns for each potentially relevant predictor variable, including lagged variables, and is a stochastic innovations process. The accuracy of estimation of the coefficients in depends on the constituent columns of , as well as the joint distribution of . Selecting predictors for that are both statistically and economically significant usually involves cycles of estimation, residual analysis, and respecification.

Classical linear model (CLM) assumptions, disscussed in the example on "Linear Models," allow ordinary least squares (OLS) to produce estimates of with desirable properties: unbiased, consistent, and efficient relative to other estimators. Lagged predictors in , however, can introduce violations of CLM assumptions. Specific violations depend on the types of lagged variables in the model, but the presence of dynamic feedback mechanisms, in general, tends to exaggerate the problems associated with static specifications.

Model specification issues are usually discussed relative to a data-generating process (DGP) for the response variable . Practically, however, the DGP is a theoretical construct, realized only in simulation. No model ever captures real-world dynamics entirely, and model coefficients in are always a subset of those in the true DGP. As a result, innovations in become a mix of the inherent stochasticity of the process and a potentially large number of omitted variables (OVs). Autocorrelations in are common in econometric models where OVs exhibit persistence over time. Rather than comparing a model to a theoretical DGP, it is more practical to evaluate whether, or to what degree, dynamics in the data have been distinguished from autocorrelations in the residuals.

Initially, lag structures may include observations of economic factors at multiple, proximate times. However, observations at time t are likely to be correlated with observations at times t - 1, t - 2, and so forth, through economic inertia. Thus, a lag structure may overspecify the dynamics of the response by including a sequence of lagged predictors with only marginal contributions to the DGP. The specification will overstate the effects of past history, and fail to impose relevant restrictions on the model. Extended lag structures also require extended presample data, reducing the sample size and decreasing the number of degrees of freedom in estimation procedures. Consequently, overspecified models may exhibit pronounced problems of collinearity and high estimator variance. The resulting estimates of have low precision, and it becomes difficult to separate individual effects.

To reduce predictor dependencies, lag structures can be restricted. If the restrictions are too severe, however, other problems of estimation arise. A restricted lag structure may underspecify the dynamics of the response by excluding predictors that are actually a significant part of the DGP. This leads to a model that underestimates the effects of past history, forcing significant predictors into the innovations process. If lagged predictors in are correlated with proximate lagged predictors in , the CLM assumption of strict exogeneity of the regressors is violated, and OLS estimates of become biased and inconsistent.

Specific issues are associated with different types of lagged predictors.

Lagged exogenous predictors , by themselves, do not violate CLM assumptions. However, DL models are often described, at least initially, by a long sequence of potentially relevant lags, and so suffer from the problems of overspecification mentioned above. Common, if somewhat ad hoc, methods for imposing restrictions on the lag weights (that is, the coefficients in ) are discussed in the example on "Lag Order Selection." In principle, however, the analysis of a DL model parallels that of a static model. Estimation issues related to collinearity, influential observations, spurious regression, autocorrelated or heteroscedastic innovations, etc. must still be examined.

Lagged endogenous predictors are more problematic. AR models introduce violations of CLM assumptions that lead to biased OLS estimates of . Absent any other CLM violations, the estimates are, nevertheless, consistent and relatively efficient. Consider a simple first-order autoregression of on :

In this model, is determined by both and . Shifting the equation backwards one step at a time, is determined by both and , is determined by both and , and so forth. Transitively, the predictor is correlated with the entire previous history of the innovations process. Just as with underspecification, the CLM assumption of strict exogeneity is violated, and OLS estimates of become biased. Because must absorb the effects of each , the model residuals no longer represent true innovations [10].

The problem is compounded when the innovations in an AR model are autocorrelated. As discussed in the example on "Residual Diagnostics," autocorrelated innovations in the absence of other CLM violations produce unbiased, if potentially high variance, OLS estimates of model coefficients. The major complication, in that case, is that the usual estimator for the standard errors of the coefficients becomes biased. (The effects of heteroscedastic innovations are similar, though typically less pronounced.) If, however, autocorrelated innovations are combined with violations of strict exogeneity, like those produced by AR terms, estimates of become both biased and inconsistent.

If lagged innovations are used as predictors, the nature of the estimation process is fundamentally changed, since the innovations cannot be directly observed. Estimation requires that the MA terms be inverted to form infinite AR representations, and then restricted to produce a model that can be estimated in practice. Since restrictions must be imposed during estimation, numerical optimization techniques other than OLS, such as maximum likelihood estimation (MLE), are required. Models with MA terms are considered in the example on "Lag Order Selection."

Simulating Estimator Bias

To illustrate the estimator bias introduced by lagged endogenous predictors, consider the following DGP:

We run two sets of repeated Monte Carlo simulations of the model. The first set uses normally and independently distributed (NID) innovations with . The second set uses AR(1) innovations with .

% Build the model components:
beta0 = 0.9;  % AR(1) parameter for y_t
gamma0 = 0.2; % AR(1) parameter for e_t
AR1 = arima('AR',beta0,'Constant',0,'Variance',1);
AR2 = arima('AR',gamma0,'Constant',0,'Variance',1);

% Simulation sample sizes:
T = [10,50,100,500,1000];
numSizes = length(T);

% Run the simulations:
numObs = max(T); % Length of simulation paths
numPaths = 1e4;  % Number of simulation paths
burnIn = 100;    % Initial transient period, to be discarded
sigma = 2.5;     % Standard deviation of the innovations
E0 = sigma*randn(burnIn+numObs,numPaths,2); % NID innovations
E1Full = E0(:,:,1);
Y1Full = filter(AR1,E1Full); % AR(1) process with NID innovations
E2Full = filter(AR2,E0(:,:,2));
Y2Full = filter(AR1,E2Full); % AR(1) process with AR(1) innovations
clear E0

% Extract simulation data, after transient period:
Y1 = Y1Full(burnIn+1:end,:);  % Y1(t)
LY1 = Y1Full(burnIn:end-1,:); % Y1(t-1)
Y2 = Y2Full(burnIn+1:end,:);  % Y2(t)
LY2 = Y2Full(burnIn:end-1,:); % Y2(t-1)
clear Y1Full Y2Full

% Compute OLS estimates of beta0:
BetaHat1 = zeros(numSizes,numPaths);
BetaHat2 = zeros(numSizes,numPaths);
for i = 1:numSizes

n = T(i);

for j = 1:numPaths
BetaHat1(i,j) = LY1(1:n,j)\Y1(1:n,j);
BetaHat2(i,j) = LY2(1:n,j)\Y2(1:n,j);
end

end

% Set plot domains:
w1 = std(BetaHat1(:));
x1 = (beta0-w1):(w1/1e2):(beta0+w1);
w2 = std(BetaHat2(:));
x2 = (beta0-w2):(w2/1e2):(beta0+w2);

% Create figures and plot handles:
hFig1 = figure;
hold on
hPlots1 = zeros(numSizes,1);
hFig2 = figure;
hold on
hPlots2 = zeros(numSizes,1);

% Plot estimator distributions:
colors = winter(numSizes);
for i = 1:numSizes

c = colors(i,:);

figure(hFig1);
f1 = ksdensity(BetaHat1(i,:),x1);
hPlots1(i) = plot(x1,f1,'Color',c,'LineWidth',2);

figure(hFig2);
f2 = ksdensity(BetaHat2(i,:),x2);
hPlots2(i) = plot(x2,f2,'Color',c,'LineWidth',2);

end

% Annotate plots:
figure(hFig1)
hBeta1 = line([beta0 beta0],[0 (1.1)*max(f1)],'Color','c','LineWidth',2);
xlabel('Estimate')
ylabel('Density')
title(['{\bf OLS Estimates of \beta_0 = ',num2str(beta0,2),', NID Innovations}'])
legend([hPlots1;hBeta1],[strcat({'T = '},num2str(T','%-d'));['\beta_0 = ',num2str(beta0,2)]])
axis tight
grid on
hold off

figure(hFig2)
hBeta2 = line([beta0 beta0],[0 (1.1)*max(f2)],'Color','c','LineWidth',2);
xlabel('Estimate')
ylabel('Density')
title(['{\bf OLS Estimates of \beta_0 = ',num2str(beta0,2),', AR(1) Innovations}'])
legend([hPlots2;hBeta2],[strcat({'T = '},num2str(T','%-d'));['\beta_0 = ',num2str(beta0,2)]])
axis tight
grid on
hold off


In all of the simulations above, . The plots are the distributions of across multiple simulations of each process, showing the bias and variance of the OLS estimator as a function of sample size.

The skew of the distributions makes it difficult to visually assess their centers. Bias is defined as , so we use the mean to measure the aggregate estimate. In the case of NID innovations, a relatively small negative bias disappears asymptotically as the aggregate estimates increase monotonically toward :

AggBetaHat1 = mean(BetaHat1,2);
fprintf('%-6s%-6s\n','Size','Mean1')
for i = 1:numSizes
fprintf('%-6u%-6.4f\n',T(i),AggBetaHat1(i))
end

Size  Mean1
10    0.7974
50    0.8683
100   0.8833
500   0.8964
1000  0.8981


In the case of AR(1) innovations, aggregate estimates with a negative bias in small samples increase monotonically toward , as above, but then pass through the DGP value at moderate sample sizes, and become progressively more positively biased in large samples:

AggBetaHat2 = mean(BetaHat2,2);
fprintf('%-6s%-6s\n','Size','Mean2')
for i = 1:numSizes
fprintf('%-6u%-6.4f\n',T(i),AggBetaHat2(i))
end

Size  Mean2
10    0.8545
50    0.9094
100   0.9201
500   0.9299
1000  0.9310


The inconsistency of the OLS estimator in the presence of autocorrelated innovations is widely known among econometricians. That it nevertheless gives accurate estimates for a range of sample sizes has practical consequences that are less widely appreciated. We descibe this behavior further in the section on "Dynamic & Correlation Effects."

The principal difference between the two sets of simulations above, in terms of OLS estimation, is whether or not there is a delay in the interaction between the innovations and the predictor. In the AR(1) process with NID innovations, the predictor is contemporaneously uncorrelated with , but correlated with all of the previous innovations, as described earlier. In the AR(1) process with AR(1) innovations, the predictor becomes correlated with as well, through the autocorrelation between and .

To see these relationships, we compute the correlation coefficients between and both and , respectively, for each process:

% Extract innovations data, after transient period:
E1 = E1Full(burnIn+1:end,:);  % E1(t)
LE1 = E1Full(burnIn:end-1,:); % E1(t-1)
E2 = E2Full(burnIn+1:end,:);  % E2(t)
LE2 = E2Full(burnIn:end-1,:); % E2(t-1)
clear E1Full E2Full

% Preallocate for correlation coefficients:
CorrE1 = zeros(numSizes,numPaths);
CorrLE1 = zeros(numSizes,numPaths);
CorrE2 = zeros(numSizes,numPaths);
CorrLE2 = zeros(numSizes,numPaths);

% Compute correlation coefficients:
for i = 1:numSizes

n = T(i);

for j = 1:numPaths

% With NID innovations:
CorrE1(i,j) = corr(LY1(1:n,j),E1(1:n,j));
CorrLE1(i,j) = corr(LY1(1:n,j),LE1(1:n,j));

% With AR(1) innovations
CorrE2(i,j) = corr(LY2(1:n,j),E2(1:n,j));
CorrLE2(i,j) = corr(LY2(1:n,j),LE2(1:n,j));

end
end

% Set plot domains:
sigmaE1 = std(CorrE1(:));
muE1 = mean(CorrE1(:));
xE1 = (muE1-sigmaE1):(sigmaE1/1e2):(muE1+sigmaE1);
sigmaLE1 = std(CorrLE1(:));
muLE1 = mean(CorrLE1(:));
xLE1 = (muLE1-sigmaLE1/2):(sigmaLE1/1e3):muLE1;
sigmaE2 = std(CorrE2(:));
muE2 = mean(CorrE2(:));
xE2 = (muE2-sigmaE2):(sigmaE2/1e2):(muE2+sigmaE2);
sigmaLE2 = std(CorrLE2(:));
muLE2 = mean(CorrLE2(:));
xLE2 = (muLE2-sigmaLE2):(sigmaLE2/1e2):(muLE2+sigmaLE2);

% Create figures and plot handles:
hFigE1 = figure;
hold on
hPlotsE1 = zeros(numSizes,1);
hFigLE1 = figure;
hold on
hPlotsLE1 = zeros(numSizes,1);
hFigE2 = figure;
hold on
hPlotsE2 = zeros(numSizes,1);
hFigLE2 = figure;
hold on
hPlotsLE2 = zeros(numSizes,1);

% Plot correlation coefficient distributions:
colors = copper(numSizes);
for i = 1:numSizes

c = colors(i,:);

figure(hFigE1)
fE1 = ksdensity(CorrE1(i,:),xE1);
hPlotsE1(i) = plot(xE1,fE1,'Color',c,'LineWidth',2);

figure(hFigLE1)
fLE1 = ksdensity(CorrLE1(i,:),xLE1);
hPlotsLE1(i) = plot(xLE1,fLE1,'Color',c,'LineWidth',2);

figure(hFigE2)
fE2 = ksdensity(CorrE2(i,:),xE2);
hPlotsE2(i) = plot(xE2,fE2,'Color',c,'LineWidth',2);

figure(hFigLE2)
fLE2 = ksdensity(CorrLE2(i,:),xLE2);
hPlotsLE2(i) = plot(xLE2,fLE2,'Color',c,'LineWidth',2);

end

clear CorrE1 CorrLE1 CorrE2 CorrLE2

% Annotate plots:
figure(hFigE1)
xlabel('Correlation Coefficient')
ylabel('Density')
title('{\bf Sample Correlation of {\it y_{t-1}} and NID {\it e_t}}')
legend(hPlotsE1,strcat({'T = '},num2str(T','%-d')),'Location','NW')
axis tight
grid on
ylim([0 (1.1)*max(fE1)])
hold off

figure(hFigLE1)
xlabel('Correlation Coefficient')
ylabel('Density')
title('{\bf Sample Correlation of {\it y_{t-1}} and NID {\it e_{t-1}}}')
legend(hPlotsLE1,strcat({'T = '},num2str(T','%-d')),'Location','NW')
axis tight
grid on
ylim([0 (1.1)*max(fLE1)])
hold off

figure(hFigE2)
xlabel('Correlation Coefficient')
ylabel('Density')
title('{\bf Sample Correlation of {\it y_{t-1}} and AR(1) {\it e_t}}')
legend(hPlotsE2,strcat({'T = '},num2str(T','%-d')),'Location','NW')
axis tight
grid on
ylim([0 (1.1)*max(fE2)])
hold off

figure(hFigLE2)
xlabel('Correlation Coefficient')
ylabel('Density')
title('{\bf Sample Correlation of {\it y_{t-1}} and AR(1) {\it e_{t-1}}}')
legend(hPlotsLE2,strcat({'T = '},num2str(T','%-d')),'Location','NW')
axis tight
grid on
ylim([0 (1.1)*max(fLE2)])
hold off


The plots show correlation between and in both cases. Contemporaneous correlation between and , however, persists asymptotically only in the case of AR(1) innovations.

The correlation coefficient is the basis for standard measures of autocorrelation. The plots above highlight the bias and variance of the correlation coefficient in finite samples, which complicates the practical evaluation of autocorrelations in model residuals. Correlation measures were examined extensively by Fisher ([3],[4],[5]), who suggested a number of alternatives.

Using biased estimates of to estimate in the residuals is also biased [11]. As described earlier, OLS residuals in the case of AR(1) innovations do not accurately represent process innovations, because of the tendency for to absorb the systematic impact produced by autocorrelated disturbances.

To further complicate matters, the Durbin-Watson statistic, popularly reported as a measure of the degree of first-order autocorrelation, is biased against detecting any relationship between and in exactly the AR models where such a relationship is present. The bias is twice as large as the bias in [8].

Thus, OLS can persistently overestimate while standard measures of residual autocorrelation underestimate the conditions that lead to inconsistency. This produces a distorted sense of goodness of fit, and a misrepresentation of the significance of dynamic terms. Durbin's test is similarly ineffective in this context [7]. Durbin's test, or the equivalent Breusch-Godfrey test, are often preferred [1].

Approximating Estimator Bias

In practice, the process that produces a time series must be discovered from the available data, and this analysis is ultimately limited by the loss of confidence that comes with estimator bias and variance. Sample sizes for economic data are often at the lower end of those considered in the simulations above, so inaccuracies can be significant. Effects on the forecast performance of autoregressive models can be severe.

For simple AR models with simple innovations structures, approximations of the OLS estimator bias are obtained theoretically. These formulas are useful when assessing the reliability of AR model coefficients derived from a single data sample.

In the case of NID innovations, we can compare the simulation bias with the widely-used approximate value of [11],[13]:

m = min(T);
M = max(T);
eBias1 = AggBetaHat1-beta0; % Estimated bias
tBias1 = -2*beta0./T;       % Theoretical bias
eB1interp = interp1(T,eBias1,m:M,'pchip');
tB1interp = interp1(T,tBias1,m:M,'pchip');

figure
plot(T,eBias1,'ro','LineWidth',2)
hold on
he1 = plot(m:M,eB1interp,'r','LineWidth',2);
plot(T,tBias1,'bo')
ht1 = plot(m:M,tB1interp,'b');
hold off
legend([he1 ht1],'Simulated Bias','Approximate Theoretical Bias','Location','E')
xlabel('Sample Size')
ylabel('Bias')
title('{\bf Estimator Bias, NID Innovations}')
grid on


The approximation is reasonably reliable in even moderately-sized samples, and generally improves as decreases in absolute value.

In the case of AR(1) innovations, the bias depends on both and . Asymptotically, it is approximated by [6]:

eBias2 = AggBetaHat2-beta0; % Estimated bias
tBias2 = gamma0*(1-beta0^2)/(1+gamma0*beta0); % Asymptotic bias
eB2interp = interp1(T,eBias2,m:M,'pchip');

figure
plot(T,eBias2,'ro','LineWidth',2)
hold on
he2 = plot(m:M,eB2interp,'r','LineWidth',2);
ht2 = plot(0:M,repmat(tBias2,1,M+1),'b','LineWidth',2);
hold off
legend([he2 ht2],'Simulated Bias','Approximate Asymptotic Bias','Location','E')
xlabel('Sample Size')
ylabel('Bias')
title('{\bf Estimator Bias, AR(1) Innovations}')
grid on


Here we see the bias move from negative to positive values as the sample size increases, then eventually approach the asymptotic bound. There is a range of sample sizes, from about 25 to 100, where the absolute value of the bias is below 0.02. In such a "sweet spot," the OLS estimator may outperform alternative estimators designed to specifically account for the presence of autocorrelation. We descibe this behavior further in the section on "Dynamic & Correlation Effects."

It is useful to plot the approximate asymptotic bias in as a function of both and , to see the affect of varying the degree of autocorrelation in both and :

figure
beta = -1:0.05:1;
gamma = -1:0.05:1;
[Beta,Gamma] = meshgrid(beta,gamma);
hold on
surf(Beta,Gamma,Gamma.*(1-Beta.^2)./(1+Gamma.*Beta))
fig = gcf;
CM = fig.Colormap;
numC = size(CM,1);
zL = zlim;
zScale = zL(2)-zL(1);
iSim = (tBias2-zL(1))*numC/zScale;
cSim = interp1(1:numC,CM,iSim);
hSim = plot3(beta0,gamma0,tBias2,'ko','MarkerSize',8,'MarkerFaceColor',cSim);
view(-20,20)
ax = gca;
u = ax.XTick;
v = ax.YTick;
mesh(u,v,zeros(length(v),length(u)),'FaceAlpha',0.7,'EdgeColor','k','LineStyle',':')
hold off
legend(hSim,'Simulated Model','Location','Best')
xlabel('\beta_0')
ylabel('\gamma_0')
zlabel('Bias')
title('{\bf Approximate Asymptotic Bias}')
camlight
colorbar
grid on


The asymptotic bias becomes significant when and move in opposite directions away from zero autocorrelation. Of course, the bias may be considerably less in finite samples.

Dynamic and Correlation Effects

As discussed, the challenges of using OLS for dynamic model estimation arise from violations of CLM assumptions. Two violations are critical, and we discuss their effects here in more detail.

The first is the dynamic effect, caused by the correlation between the predictor and all of the previous innovation . This occurs in any AR model, and results in biased OLS estimates from finite samples. In the absence of other violations, OLS nevertheless remains consistent, and the bias disappears in large samples.

The second is the correlation effect, caused by the contemporaneous correlation between the predictor and the innovation . This occurs when the innovations process is autocorrelated, and results in the OLS coefficient of the predictor receiving too much, or too little, credit for contemporaneous variations in the response, depending on the sign of the correlation. That is, it produces a persistent bias.

The first set of simulations above illustrate a situation in which is positive and is zero. The second set of simulations illustrate a situation in which both and are positive. For positive , the dynamic effect on is negative. For positive , the correlation effect on is positive. Thus, in the first set of simulations there is a negative bias across sample sizes. In the second set of simulations, however, there is a competition between the two effects, with the dynamic effect dominating in small samples, and the correlation effect dominating in large samples.

Positive AR coefficients are common in econometric models, so it is typical for the two effects to offset each other, creating a range of sample sizes for which the OLS bias is significantly reduced. The width of this range depends on and , and determines the OLS-superior range in which OLS outperforms alternative estimators designed to directly account for autocorrelations in the innovations.

Some of the factors affecting the size of the dynamic and correlation effects are summarized in [9]. Among them:

Dynamic Effect

Increases with decreasing sample size.

Decreases with increasing if the variance of the innovations is held fixed.

Decreases with increasing if the variance of the innovations is adjusted to maintain a constant .

Increases with the variance of the innovations.

Correlation Effect

Increases with increasing , at a decreasing rate.

Decreases with increasing , at an increasing rate.

The influence of these factors can be tested by changing the coefficients in the simulations above. In general, the larger the dynamic effect and the smaller the correlation effect, the wider the OLS-superior range.

Jackknife Bias Reduction

The jackknife procedure is a cross-validation technique commonly used to reduce the bias of sample statistics. Jacknife estimators of model coefficients are relatively easy to compute, without the need for large simulations or resampling.

The basic idea is to compute an estimate from the full sample and from a sequence of subsamples, then combine the estimates in a manner that eliminates some portion of the bias. In general, for a sample of size , the bias of the OLS estimator can be expressed as an expansion in powers of :

where the weights and depend on the specific coefficient and model. If estimates are made on a sequence of subsamples of length , then the jackknife estimator of is:

It can be shown that the jackknife estimator satisfies:

thus removing the term from the bias expansion. Whether the bias is actually reduced depends on the size of the remaining terms in the expansion, but jackknife estimators have performed well in practice. In particular, the technique is robust with respect to nonnormal innovations, ARCH effects, and various model misspecifications [2].

The Statistics Toolbox function jackknife implements a jackknife procedure using a systematic sequence of "leave-one-out" subsamples. For time series, deleting observations alters the autocorrelation structure. To maintain the dependence structure in a time series, a jackknife procedure must use nonoverlapping subsamples, such as partitions or moving blocks.

The following implements a simple jackknife estimate of using a partition of the data in each of the simulations to produce the subsample estimates . We compare the performance before and after jackknifing, on the simulated data with either NID or AR(1) innovations:

m = 5; % Number of subsamples

% Preallocate memory:
betaHat1 = zeros(m,1); % Subsample estimates, NID innovations
betaHat2 = zeros(m,1); % Subsample estimates, AR(1) innovations
BetaHat1J = zeros(numSizes,numPaths); % Jackknife estimates, NID innovations
BetaHat2J = zeros(numSizes,numPaths); % Jackknife estimates, AR(1) innovations

% Compute jackknife estimates:
for i = 1:numSizes

n = T(i); % Sample size
l = n/m;  % Length of partition subinterval

for j = 1:numPaths

for s = 1:m

betaHat1(s) = LY1((s-1)*l+1:s*l,j)\Y1((s-1)*l+1:s*l,j);
betaHat2(s) = LY2((s-1)*l+1:s*l,j)\Y2((s-1)*l+1:s*l,j);

BetaHat1J(i,j) = (n/(n-l))*BetaHat1(i,j)-(l/((n-l)*m))*sum(betaHat1);
BetaHat2J(i,j) = (n/(n-l))*BetaHat2(i,j)-(l/((n-l)*m))*sum(betaHat2);

end

end

end

clear BetaHat1 BetaHat2

% Display mean estimates, before and after jackknifing:
AggBetaHat1J = mean(BetaHat1J,2);
clear BetaHat1J
fprintf('%-6s%-8s%-8s\n','Size','Mean1','Mean1J')
for i = 1:numSizes
fprintf('%-6u%-8.4f%-8.4f\n',T(i),AggBetaHat1(i),AggBetaHat1J(i))
end

fprintf('\n')

AggBetaHat2J = mean(BetaHat2J,2);
clear BetaHat2J
fprintf('%-6s%-8s%-8s\n','Size','Mean2','Mean2J')
for i = 1:numSizes
fprintf('%-6u%-8.4f%-8.4f\n',T(i),AggBetaHat2(i),AggBetaHat2J(i))
end

Size  Mean1   Mean1J
10    0.7974  0.8055
50    0.8683  0.8860
100   0.8833  0.8955
500   0.8964  0.8997
1000  0.8981  0.8998

Size  Mean2   Mean2J
10    0.8545  0.8594
50    0.9094  0.9233
100   0.9201  0.9294
500   0.9299  0.9323
1000  0.9310  0.9323


The number of subsamples, , is chosen with the smallest sample size, , in mind. Larger may improve performance in larger samples, but there is no accepted heuristic for choosing the subsample sizes, so some experimentation is necessary. The code is easily adapted to use alternative subsampling methods, such as moving blocks.

The results show a uniform reduction in bias for the case of NID innovations. In the case of AR(1) innovations, the procedure seems to push the estimate more quickly through the OLS-superior range.

Summary

This example shows a simple AR model, together with a few simple innovations structures, as a way of illustrating some general issues related to the estimation of dynamic models. The code here is easily modified to observe the effects of changing parameter values, adjusting the innovations variance, using different lag structures, and so on. Explanatory DL terms can also be added to the models. DL terms have the ability to reduce estimator bias, though OLS tends to overestimate AR coefficients at the expense of the DL coefficients [11]. The general set-up here allows for a great deal of experimentation, as is often required when evaluating models in practice.

When considering the trade-offs presented by the bias and variance of any estimator, it is important to remember that biased estimators with reduced variance may have superior mean-squared error characteristics when compared to higher-variance unbiased estimators. A strong point of the OLS estimator, beyond its simplicity in computation, is its relative efficiency in reducing its variance with increasing sample size. This is often enough to adopt OLS as the estimator of choice, even for dynamic models. Another strong point, as this example has shown, is the presence of an OLS-superior range, where OLS may outperform other estimators, even under what are generally regarded as adverse conditions. The weakest point of the OLS estimator is its performance in small samples, where the bias and variance may be unacceptable.

The estimation issues raised in this example suggest the need for new indicators of autocorrelation, and more robust estimation methods to be used in its presence. Some of these methods are described in the example on "Generalized Least Squares & HAC Estimators." However, as we have seen, the inconsistency of the OLS estimator for AR models with autocorrelation is not enough to rule it out, in general, as a viable competitor to more complicated, consistent estimators such as maximum likelihood, feasible generalized least squares, and instrumental variables, which attempt to eliminate the correlation effect, but do not alter the dynamic effect. The best choice will depend on the sample size, the lag structure, the presence of exogenous variables, and so on, and often requires the kinds of simulations presented in this example.

References

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[11] Malinvaud, E. Statistical Methods of Econometrics. Amsterdam: North-Holland, 1970.

[12] Marriott, F. and J. Pope. "Bias in the Estimation of Autocorrelations." Biometrika. Vol 41, 1954, pp. 390-402.

[13] White, J. S. "Asymptotic Expansions for the Mean and Variance of the Serial Correlation Coefficient." Biometrika. Vol 48, 1961, pp. 85-94.