Deakin University
Browse

Vector autoregressions and macroeconomic modeling: an error taxonomy

Version 2 2024-06-06, 12:03
Version 1 2017-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 12:03 authored by DS Poskitt, W Yao
In this article we investigate the theoretical behaviour of finite lag VAR(n) models fitted to time series that in truth come from an infinite order VAR(∞) data generating mechanism. We show that the overall error can be broken down into two basic components, an estimation error that stems from the difference between the parameter estimates and their population ensemble VAR(n) counterparts, and an approximation error that stems from the difference between the VAR(n) and the true VAR(∞). The two sources of error are shown to be present in other performance indicators previously employed in the literature to characterize, so called, truncation effects. Our theoretical analysis indicates that the magnitude of the estimation error exceeds that of the approximation error, but experimental results based upon a prototypical real business cycle model and a practical example indicate that the approximation error approaches its asymptotic position far more slowly than does the estimation error, their relative orders of magnitude notwithstanding. The experimental results suggest that with sample sizes and lag lengths like those commonly employed in practice VAR(n) models are likely to exhibit serious errors of both types when attempting to replicate the dynamics of the true underlying process and that inferences based on VAR(n) models can be very untrustworthy.

History

Related Materials

Location

New York, N.Y.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2017, American Statistical Association

Journal

Journal of business & economic statistics

Volume

35

Season

In press

Pagination

407-419

ISSN

0735-0015

eISSN

1537-2707

Issue

3

Publisher

Taylor & Francis