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Econometrics, Volume 12, Issue 2 (June 2024) – 7 articles

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19 pages, 806 KiB  
Article
Financial and Oil Market’s Co-Movements by a Regime-Switching Copula
by Manel Soury
Econometrics 2024, 12(2), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/econometrics12020014 - 24 May 2024
Viewed by 139
Abstract
Over the years, oil prices and financial stock markets have always had a complex relationship. This paper analyzes the interactions and co-movements between the oil market (WTI crude oil) and two major stock markets in Europe and the US (the Euro Stoxx 50 [...] Read more.
Over the years, oil prices and financial stock markets have always had a complex relationship. This paper analyzes the interactions and co-movements between the oil market (WTI crude oil) and two major stock markets in Europe and the US (the Euro Stoxx 50 and the SP500) for the period from 1990 to 2023. For that, I use both the time-varying and the Markov copula models. The latter one represents an extension of the former one, where the constant term of the dynamic dependence parameter is driven by a hidden two-state first-order Markov chain. It is also called the dynamic regime-switching (RS) copula model. To estimate the model, I use the inference function for margins (IFM) method together with Kim’s filter for the Markov switching process. The marginals of the returns are modeled by the GARCH and GAS models. Empirical results show that the RS copula model seems adequate to measure and evaluate the time-varying and non-linear dependence structure. Two persistent regimes of high and low dependency have been detected. There was a jump in the co-movements of both pairs during high regimes associated with instability and crises. In addition, the extreme dependence between crude oil and US/European stock markets is time-varying but also asymmetric, as indicated by the SJC copula. The correlation in the lower tail is higher than that in the upper. Hence, oil and stock returns are more closely joined and tend to co-move more closely together in bullish periods than in bearish periods. Finally, the dependence between WTI crude oil and the SP500 stock index seems to be more affected by exogenous shocks and instability than the oil and European stock markets. Full article
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21 pages, 3730 KiB  
Article
On the Validity of Granger Causality for Ecological Count Time Series
by Konstantinos G. Papaspyropoulos and Dimitris Kugiumtzis
Econometrics 2024, 12(2), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/econometrics12020013 - 9 May 2024
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Abstract
Knowledge of causal relationships is fundamental for understanding the dynamic mechanisms of ecological systems. To detect such relationships from multivariate time series, Granger causality, an idea first developed in econometrics, has been formulated in terms of vector autoregressive (VAR) models. Granger causality for [...] Read more.
Knowledge of causal relationships is fundamental for understanding the dynamic mechanisms of ecological systems. To detect such relationships from multivariate time series, Granger causality, an idea first developed in econometrics, has been formulated in terms of vector autoregressive (VAR) models. Granger causality for count time series, often seen in ecology, has rarely been explored, and this may be due to the difficulty in estimating autoregressive models on multivariate count time series. The present research investigates the appropriateness of VAR-based Granger causality for ecological count time series by conducting a simulation study using several systems of different numbers of variables and time series lengths. VAR-based Granger causality for count time series (DVAR) seems to be estimated efficiently even for two counts in long time series. For all the studied time series lengths, DVAR for more than eight counts matches the Granger causality effects obtained by VAR on the continuous-valued time series well. The positive results, also in two ecological time series, suggest the use of VAR-based Granger causality for assessing causal relationships in real-world count time series even with few distinct integer values or many zeros. Full article
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21 pages, 774 KiB  
Article
Short-Term Hourly Ozone Concentration Forecasting Using Functional Data Approach
by Ismail Shah, Naveed Gul, Sajid Ali and Hassan Houmani
Econometrics 2024, 12(2), 12; https://doi.org/10.3390/econometrics12020012 - 5 May 2024
Viewed by 802
Abstract
Air pollution, especially ground-level ozone, poses severe threats to human health and ecosystems. Accurate forecasting of ozone concentrations is essential for reducing its adverse effects. This study aims to use the functional time series approach to model ozone concentrations, a method less explored [...] Read more.
Air pollution, especially ground-level ozone, poses severe threats to human health and ecosystems. Accurate forecasting of ozone concentrations is essential for reducing its adverse effects. This study aims to use the functional time series approach to model ozone concentrations, a method less explored in the literature, and compare it with traditional time series and machine learning models. To this end, the ozone concentration hourly time series is first filtered for yearly seasonality using smoothing splines that lead us to the stochastic (residual) component. The stochastic component is modeled and forecast using a functional autoregressive model (FAR), where each daily ozone concentration profile is considered a single functional datum. For comparison purposes, different traditional and machine learning techniques, such as autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA), vector autoregressive (VAR), neural network autoregressive (NNAR), random forest (RF), and support vector machine (SVM), are also used to model and forecast the stochastic component. Once the forecast from the yearly seasonality component and stochastic component are obtained, both are added to obtain the final forecast. For empirical investigation, data consisting of hourly ozone measurements from Los Angeles from 2013 to 2017 are used, and one-day-ahead out-of-sample forecasts are obtained for a complete year. Based on the evaluation metrics, such as R2, root mean squared error (RMSE), and mean absolute error (MAE), the forecasting results indicate that the FAR outperforms the competitors in most scenarios, with the SVM model performing the least favorably across all cases. Full article
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23 pages, 374 KiB  
Article
Stein-like Common Correlated Effects Estimation under Structural Breaks
by Shahnaz Parsaeian
Econometrics 2024, 12(2), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/econometrics12020011 - 18 Apr 2024
Viewed by 745
Abstract
This paper develops a Stein-like combined estimator for large heterogeneous panel data models under common structural breaks. The model allows for cross-sectional dependence through a general multifactor error structure. By utilizing the common correlated effects (CCE) estimation technique, we propose a Stein-like combined [...] Read more.
This paper develops a Stein-like combined estimator for large heterogeneous panel data models under common structural breaks. The model allows for cross-sectional dependence through a general multifactor error structure. By utilizing the common correlated effects (CCE) estimation technique, we propose a Stein-like combined estimator of the CCE full-sample estimator (i.e., estimation using both the pre-break and post-break observations) and the CCE post-break estimator (i.e., estimation using only the post-break sample observations). The proposed Stein-like combined estimator benefits from exploiting the pre-break sample observations. We derive the optimal combination weight by minimizing the asymptotic risk. We show the superiority of the CCE Stein-like combined estimator over the CCE post-break estimator in terms of the asymptotic risk. Further, we establish the asymptotic properties of the CCE mean group Stein-like combined estimator. The finite sample performance of our proposed estimator is investigated using Monte Carlo experiments and an empirical application of predicting the output growth of industrialized countries. Full article
16 pages, 505 KiB  
Article
The Gini and Mean Log Deviation Indices of Multivariate Inequality of Opportunity
by Marek Kapera and Martyna Kobus
Econometrics 2024, 12(2), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/econometrics12020010 - 17 Apr 2024
Viewed by 842
Abstract
The most common approach to measuring inequality of opportunity in income is to apply the Gini inequality index or the Mean Log Deviation (MLD) index to a smoothed distribution (i.e., a distribution of type mean incomes). We show how this approach can be [...] Read more.
The most common approach to measuring inequality of opportunity in income is to apply the Gini inequality index or the Mean Log Deviation (MLD) index to a smoothed distribution (i.e., a distribution of type mean incomes). We show how this approach can be naturally extended to include life outcomes other than income (e.g., health, education). We propose two measures: the Gini and MLD indices of multivariate inequality of opportunity. We show that they can be decomposed into the contribution of each outcome and the dependence of the outcomes. Using these measures, we calculate inequality of opportunity in health and income across European countries. Full article
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15 pages, 312 KiB  
Article
A Pretest Estimator for the Two-Way Error Component Model
by Badi H. Baltagi, Georges Bresson and Jean-Michel Etienne
Econometrics 2024, 12(2), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/econometrics12020009 - 16 Apr 2024
Viewed by 788
Abstract
For a panel data linear regression model with both individual and time effects, empirical studies select the two-way random-effects (TWRE) estimator if the Hausman test based on the contrast between the two-way fixed-effects (TWFE) estimator and the TWRE estimator is not rejected. Alternatively, [...] Read more.
For a panel data linear regression model with both individual and time effects, empirical studies select the two-way random-effects (TWRE) estimator if the Hausman test based on the contrast between the two-way fixed-effects (TWFE) estimator and the TWRE estimator is not rejected. Alternatively, they select the TWFE estimator in cases where this Hausman test rejects the null hypothesis. Not all the regressors may be correlated with these individual and time effects. The one-way Hausman-Taylor model has been generalized to the two-way error component model and allow some but not all regressors to be correlated with these individual and time effects. This paper proposes a pretest estimator for this two-way error component panel data regression model based on two Hausman tests. The first Hausman test is based upon the contrast between the TWFE and the TWRE estimators. The second Hausman test is based on the contrast between the two-way Hausman and Taylor (TWHT) estimator and the TWFE estimator. The Monte Carlo results show that this pretest estimator is always second best in MSE performance compared to the efficient estimator, whether the model is random-effects, fixed-effects or Hausman and Taylor. This paper generalizes the one-way pretest estimator to the two-way error component model. Full article
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16 pages, 2945 KiB  
Article
Biases in the Maximum Simulated Likelihood Estimation of the Mixed Logit Model
by Maksat Jumamyradov, Murat Munkin, William H. Greene and Benjamin M. Craig
Econometrics 2024, 12(2), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/econometrics12020008 - 27 Mar 2024
Viewed by 974
Abstract
In a recent study, it was demonstrated that the maximum simulated likelihood (MSL) estimator produces significant biases when applied to the bivariate normal and bivariate Poisson-lognormal models. The study’s conclusion suggests that similar biases could be present in other models generated by correlated [...] Read more.
In a recent study, it was demonstrated that the maximum simulated likelihood (MSL) estimator produces significant biases when applied to the bivariate normal and bivariate Poisson-lognormal models. The study’s conclusion suggests that similar biases could be present in other models generated by correlated bivariate normal structures, which include several commonly used specifications of the mixed logit (MIXL) models. This paper conducts a simulation study analyzing the MSL estimation of the error components (EC) MIXL. We find that the MSL estimator produces significant biases in the estimated parameters. The problem becomes worse when the true value of the variance parameter is small and the correlation parameter is large in magnitude. In some cases, the biases in the estimated marginal effects are as large as 12% of the true values. These biases are largely invariant to increases in the number of Halton draws. Full article
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