Refine
Year of publication
- 2006 (1)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Language
- English (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (1)
Keywords
- Panel (1)
- Panelverfahren (1)
- Statistischer Test (1)
- Zeitreihe (1)
Institute
This thesis is concerned with the derivation of new methods for the analysis of nonstationary, cross correlated panels. The suggested procedures are carefully quantified by means of Monte Carlo experiments. Typical applications of the developed methods consist in multi-country studies, with several countries observed over a couple of decades. The empirical applications implemented here are the testing for trends in the investment share in European GDPs and the examination of OECD interest rates. In the first chapter, a panel test for the presence of a linear time trend is proposed. The test is applicable in cross-correlated, heterogeneous panels and it can also be used when the integration order of innovations is unknown, by means of subsampling. In the next chapter a cointegration test having asymptotic standard normal distributiun and not requiring exogeneity assumptions is derived. In panels exhibiting cross-correlation or cointegration, individual test statistics are asymptotically independent, which leads to a panel test statistic robust to dependence across units. The third chapter examines in an econometric context the simple idea of combining p-values from a series of statistical tests and improves its applicability in the presence of cross-correlation. The last chapter applies recent panel techniques to OECD long-term interest rates and differentials thereof, finding only rather week evidence in favor of stationarity when allowing for cross-correlation.