I use Monte Carlo simulations, the jackknife and multiple forms of the bootstrap to study a comprehensive sample of 1359 instrumental variables regressions in 31 papers published in the journals of the American Economic Association. Monte Carlo simulations based upon published regressions show that non-iid error processes adversely affect the size and power of IV estimates, while increasing the bias of IV relative to OLS, producing a very low ratio of power to size and mean squared error that is almost always larger than biased OLS. Weak instrument pre-tests based upon F-statistics are found to be largely uninformative of both size and bias. In published papers, statistically significant IV results generally depend upon only one or two obse...
IV estimation is examined when some instruments may be invalid. This is relevant because the initial...
Abstract The instrumental variable method has been employed within economics to infer causality in t...
Results published recently by Hendry (1979) for the limiting distribution of inconsistent instrument...
I use Monte Carlo simulations, the jackknife and multiple forms of the bootstrap to study a comprehe...
This paper analyzes the conditions under which consistent estimation can be achieved in instrumental...
AbstractObjectivesTo examine the performance of instrumental variables (IV) and ordinary least squar...
Instrumental variables estimation can, in principle, avoid biases that ordinary least squares estima...
The Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) method is the most widely used method to estimate the parameters o...
The two-stage least-squares (2SLS) instrumental variables estimator is commonly used to address endo...
Abstract. Instrumental variable (IV) methods are becoming increas-ingly popular as they seem to offe...
In this paper we examine the finite sample performance of two estimators one developed by Blundell, ...
National audienceThis note looks at the properties of instrumental-variable estimators of models for...
In designing Monte Carlo simulation studies for analyzing finite sample properties of econometric in...
We present a new jackknife estimator for instrumental variable inference with unknown heteroskedasti...
We present a new jackknife estimator for instrumental variable inference with unknown heteroskedasti...
IV estimation is examined when some instruments may be invalid. This is relevant because the initial...
Abstract The instrumental variable method has been employed within economics to infer causality in t...
Results published recently by Hendry (1979) for the limiting distribution of inconsistent instrument...
I use Monte Carlo simulations, the jackknife and multiple forms of the bootstrap to study a comprehe...
This paper analyzes the conditions under which consistent estimation can be achieved in instrumental...
AbstractObjectivesTo examine the performance of instrumental variables (IV) and ordinary least squar...
Instrumental variables estimation can, in principle, avoid biases that ordinary least squares estima...
The Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) method is the most widely used method to estimate the parameters o...
The two-stage least-squares (2SLS) instrumental variables estimator is commonly used to address endo...
Abstract. Instrumental variable (IV) methods are becoming increas-ingly popular as they seem to offe...
In this paper we examine the finite sample performance of two estimators one developed by Blundell, ...
National audienceThis note looks at the properties of instrumental-variable estimators of models for...
In designing Monte Carlo simulation studies for analyzing finite sample properties of econometric in...
We present a new jackknife estimator for instrumental variable inference with unknown heteroskedasti...
We present a new jackknife estimator for instrumental variable inference with unknown heteroskedasti...
IV estimation is examined when some instruments may be invalid. This is relevant because the initial...
Abstract The instrumental variable method has been employed within economics to infer causality in t...
Results published recently by Hendry (1979) for the limiting distribution of inconsistent instrument...