When is Nonfundamentalness in VARs a Real Problem? An Application to News Shocks /
Beaudry, Paul.
When is Nonfundamentalness in VARs a Real Problem? An Application to News Shocks / Paul Beaudry, Patrick Fève, Alain Guay, Franck Portier. - Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 2015. - 1 online resource: illustrations (black and white); - NBER working paper series no. w21466 . - Working Paper Series (National Bureau of Economic Research) no. w21466. .
August 2015.
When the VAR representation of a times series has a non-fundamental representation, standard SVAR techniques cannot be used to exactly identify the effects of structural shocks. This problem is know to potentially arise when one of the structural shocks represents news about the future. However, as we shall show, in many case the non-fundamental representation of a time series may be very close to its fundamental representation implying that standard SVAR techniques may provide a very good approximation of the effects of structural shocks even when the non-fundamentalness is formally present. This leads to the question: When is non-fundamentalness a real problem? In this paper we derive and illustrate a diagnostic based on a $R^2$ which provides a simple means of detecting whether non-fundamentalness is likely to be a quantitatively important problem in an applied settings. We use the identification of technological news shocks in US data as our running example.
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Mode of access: World Wide Web.
When is Nonfundamentalness in VARs a Real Problem? An Application to News Shocks / Paul Beaudry, Patrick Fève, Alain Guay, Franck Portier. - Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 2015. - 1 online resource: illustrations (black and white); - NBER working paper series no. w21466 . - Working Paper Series (National Bureau of Economic Research) no. w21466. .
August 2015.
When the VAR representation of a times series has a non-fundamental representation, standard SVAR techniques cannot be used to exactly identify the effects of structural shocks. This problem is know to potentially arise when one of the structural shocks represents news about the future. However, as we shall show, in many case the non-fundamental representation of a time series may be very close to its fundamental representation implying that standard SVAR techniques may provide a very good approximation of the effects of structural shocks even when the non-fundamentalness is formally present. This leads to the question: When is non-fundamentalness a real problem? In this paper we derive and illustrate a diagnostic based on a $R^2$ which provides a simple means of detecting whether non-fundamentalness is likely to be a quantitatively important problem in an applied settings. We use the identification of technological news shocks in US data as our running example.
System requirements: Adobe [Acrobat] Reader required for PDF files.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.