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book Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge cover

Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge

النسخة 4الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0324660609
book Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge cover

Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge

النسخة 4الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0324660609
تمرين 4
Use the data in WAGE2.RAW for this exercise.
(i) In Example 15.2, using sibs as an instrument for educ, the IV estimate of the return to education is.122. To convince yourself that using sibs as an IV for educ is not the same as just plugging sibs in for educ and running an OLS regression, run the regression of log(wage) on sibs and explain your findings.
(ii) The variable brthord is birth order (brthord is one for a first-born child, two for a second-born child, and so on). Explain why educ and brthord might be negatively correlated. Regress educ on brthord to determine whether there is a statistically significant negative correlation.
(iii) Use brthord as an IV for educ in Use the data in WAGE2.RAW for this exercise. (i) In Example 15.2, using sibs as an instrument for educ, the IV estimate of the return to education is.122. To convince yourself that using sibs as an IV for educ is not the same as just plugging sibs in for educ and running an OLS regression, run the regression of log(wage) on sibs and explain your findings. (ii) The variable brthord is birth order (brthord is one for a first-born child, two for a second-born child, and so on). Explain why educ and brthord might be negatively correlated. Regress educ on brthord to determine whether there is a statistically significant negative correlation. (iii) Use brthord as an IV for educ in   . Report and interpret the results. (iv) Now, suppose that we include number of siblings as an explanatory variable in the wage equation; this controls for family background, to some extent: log(wage) = 0 + 1 educ + 2 sibs + u. Suppose that we want to use brthord as an IV for educ, assuming that sibs is exogenous. The reduced form for educ is educ = 0 + 1 sibs + 2 brthord + v. State and test the identification assumption. (v) Estimate the equation from part (iv) using brthord as an IV for educ (and sibs as its own IV). Comment on the standard errors for   and   . (vi) Using the fitted values from part (iv), educ, compute the correlation between educ and sibs. Use this result to explain your findings from part (v). . Report and interpret the results.
(iv) Now, suppose that we include number of siblings as an explanatory variable in the wage equation; this controls for family background, to some extent:
log(wage) = 0 + 1 educ + 2 sibs + u.
Suppose that we want to use brthord as an IV for educ, assuming that sibs is exogenous. The reduced form for educ is
educ = 0 + 1 sibs + 2 brthord + v.
State and test the identification assumption.
(v) Estimate the equation from part (iv) using brthord as an IV for educ (and sibs as its own IV). Comment on the standard errors for Use the data in WAGE2.RAW for this exercise. (i) In Example 15.2, using sibs as an instrument for educ, the IV estimate of the return to education is.122. To convince yourself that using sibs as an IV for educ is not the same as just plugging sibs in for educ and running an OLS regression, run the regression of log(wage) on sibs and explain your findings. (ii) The variable brthord is birth order (brthord is one for a first-born child, two for a second-born child, and so on). Explain why educ and brthord might be negatively correlated. Regress educ on brthord to determine whether there is a statistically significant negative correlation. (iii) Use brthord as an IV for educ in   . Report and interpret the results. (iv) Now, suppose that we include number of siblings as an explanatory variable in the wage equation; this controls for family background, to some extent: log(wage) = 0 + 1 educ + 2 sibs + u. Suppose that we want to use brthord as an IV for educ, assuming that sibs is exogenous. The reduced form for educ is educ = 0 + 1 sibs + 2 brthord + v. State and test the identification assumption. (v) Estimate the equation from part (iv) using brthord as an IV for educ (and sibs as its own IV). Comment on the standard errors for   and   . (vi) Using the fitted values from part (iv), educ, compute the correlation between educ and sibs. Use this result to explain your findings from part (v). and Use the data in WAGE2.RAW for this exercise. (i) In Example 15.2, using sibs as an instrument for educ, the IV estimate of the return to education is.122. To convince yourself that using sibs as an IV for educ is not the same as just plugging sibs in for educ and running an OLS regression, run the regression of log(wage) on sibs and explain your findings. (ii) The variable brthord is birth order (brthord is one for a first-born child, two for a second-born child, and so on). Explain why educ and brthord might be negatively correlated. Regress educ on brthord to determine whether there is a statistically significant negative correlation. (iii) Use brthord as an IV for educ in   . Report and interpret the results. (iv) Now, suppose that we include number of siblings as an explanatory variable in the wage equation; this controls for family background, to some extent: log(wage) = 0 + 1 educ + 2 sibs + u. Suppose that we want to use brthord as an IV for educ, assuming that sibs is exogenous. The reduced form for educ is educ = 0 + 1 sibs + 2 brthord + v. State and test the identification assumption. (v) Estimate the equation from part (iv) using brthord as an IV for educ (and sibs as its own IV). Comment on the standard errors for   and   . (vi) Using the fitted values from part (iv), educ, compute the correlation between educ and sibs. Use this result to explain your findings from part (v). .
(vi) Using the fitted values from part (iv), educ, compute the correlation between educ and sibs. Use this result to explain your findings from part (v).
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Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge
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