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book Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach 6th Edition by Jeffrey M Wooldridge cover

Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach 6th Edition by Jeffrey M Wooldridge

Edition 6ISBN: 130527010X
book Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach 6th Edition by Jeffrey M Wooldridge cover

Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach 6th Edition by Jeffrey M Wooldridge

Edition 6ISBN: 130527010X
Exercise 16

Suppose that the equation

 Suppose that the equation   satisfies the sequential exogeneity assumption in equation Equation   . <blockquote> (i) Suppose you difference the equation to obtain   How come applying OLS on the differenced equation does not generally result in consistent estimators of the ?j? (ii) What assumption on the explanatory variables in the original equation would ensure that OLS on the differences consistently estimates the ?j? (iii) Let z<span class=sub>t1</span>, …, z<span class=sub>tk</span> be a set of explanatory variables dated contemporaneously with y<span class=sub>t</span>. If we specify the static regression model yt= ?0 + ?1zt1 + … + ?kztk+ut,describe what we need to assume for x<span class=sub>t</span> = z<span class=sub>t</span> to be sequentially exogenous. Do you think the assumptions are likely to hold in economic applications? </blockquote>   satisfies the sequential exogeneity assumption in equation

Equation  Suppose that the equation   satisfies the sequential exogeneity assumption in equation Equation   . <blockquote> (i) Suppose you difference the equation to obtain   How come applying OLS on the differenced equation does not generally result in consistent estimators of the ?j? (ii) What assumption on the explanatory variables in the original equation would ensure that OLS on the differences consistently estimates the ?j? (iii) Let z<span class=sub>t1</span>, …, z<span class=sub>tk</span> be a set of explanatory variables dated contemporaneously with y<span class=sub>t</span>. If we specify the static regression model yt= ?0 + ?1zt1 + … + ?kztk+ut,describe what we need to assume for x<span class=sub>t</span> = z<span class=sub>t</span> to be sequentially exogenous. Do you think the assumptions are likely to hold in economic applications? </blockquote>   .

(i) Suppose you difference the equation to obtain  Suppose that the equation   satisfies the sequential exogeneity assumption in equation Equation   . <blockquote> (i) Suppose you difference the equation to obtain   How come applying OLS on the differenced equation does not generally result in consistent estimators of the ?j? (ii) What assumption on the explanatory variables in the original equation would ensure that OLS on the differences consistently estimates the ?j? (iii) Let z<span class=sub>t1</span>, …, z<span class=sub>tk</span> be a set of explanatory variables dated contemporaneously with y<span class=sub>t</span>. If we specify the static regression model yt= ?0 + ?1zt1 + … + ?kztk+ut,describe what we need to assume for x<span class=sub>t</span> = z<span class=sub>t</span> to be sequentially exogenous. Do you think the assumptions are likely to hold in economic applications? </blockquote>   How come applying OLS on the differenced equation does not generally result in consistent estimators of the ?j?

(ii) What assumption on the explanatory variables in the original equation would ensure that OLS on the differences consistently estimates the ?j?

(iii) Let zt1, …, ztk be a set of explanatory variables dated contemporaneously with yt. If we specify the static regression model yt= ?0 + ?1zt1 + … + ?kztk+ut,describe what we need to assume for xt = zt to be sequentially exogenous. Do you think the assumptions are likely to hold in economic applications?

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Our difference equation is blured imageamp; Now if we ap ...

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Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach 6th Edition by Jeffrey M Wooldridge
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