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  • #16
    Thanks very much JanDitzen I've read your stata journal entries and descriptions, but I can't find further information on how the IV option works within xtdcce2? Does it just follow the normal 2-stage procedure - for a single endogenous regressor, obtain the predicted value of the said variable using the instrument/other exogenous covariates, and use this predicted value in place of the endogenous regressor in the ARDL?

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    • #17
      Originally posted by Trevor Lee View Post
      Thanks very much JanDitzen I've read your stata journal entries and descriptions, but I can't find further information on how the IV option works within xtdcce2? Does it just follow the normal 2-stage procedure - for a single endogenous regressor, obtain the predicted value of the said variable using the instrument/other exogenous covariates, and use this predicted value in place of the endogenous regressor in the ARDL?
      Yes, it is a simple two-stage approach. Please bear in mind that the combination cross-section dependence and IV regressions was never published beyond working paper (Neal (2015), link), so there is no well founded theoretical foundation!

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      • #18
        Originally posted by JanDitzen View Post

        Yes, it is a simple two-stage approach. Please bear in mind that the combination cross-section dependence and IV regressions was never published beyond a working paper (Neal (2015), link), so there is no well founded theoretical foundation!
        Great, that paper is very helpful. But yes, I'll keep in mind the tenuous theoretical foundations. On a separate note, I was wondering how where panel cointegration testing generally fits within the CCE-ARDL framework? Some papers seem to test for it before estimating ARDLs, whereas the illustration you give with estimating a Solow model (https://www.stata.com/symposiums/eco...n21_Ditzen.pdf) doesn't use it.

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        • #19
          You should do cointegration tests before you estimate the long run model. My talk at the Econ Symposium last year was tailored to panels with large N and large T and topics beyond the "classical" time series or panel data econometrics. Therefore I did not discuss cointegration in more detail.

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          • #20
            Originally posted by JanDitzen View Post
            You should do cointegration tests before you estimate the long run model. My talk at the Econ Symposium last year was tailored to panels with large N and large T and topics beyond the "classical" time series or panel data econometrics. Therefore I did not discuss cointegration in more detail.
            Sorry to re-up this, but is co-integration a necessary condition for using the CCE-ARDL methods discussed in your talk? My basic understanding is that co-integration tests for long-run relationships between I(1) variables, hence I would think it necessary to find some evidence for co-integration before using an ARDL to estimate long-run effects. But this paper (https://link.springer.com/content/pd...pdf?pdf=button), which seems very respectable, uses the absence of co-integrating relationships to justify the ARDL methods employed (CCEMG/CCEPMG). Elsewhere I've seen positive results from co-integration tests used to justify further investigation with ARDLs.
            Thanks in advance for addressing the confusion

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            • #21
              Hi JanDitzen What is the minimum required time for CCEMG for each panel? Can I apply xtdcce2 if the time period (t) is less than 10 for a few countries and 80 for others? I am working on quarterly data, and I am covering 187 countries, i.e., p=187. Thanks in advance.

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              • #22
                There is no clear guidance on what is the smallest number of time periods. In general I would make sure that you have a sufficiently large degree of freedom if you would estimate the model with just the specific time series. Balanced vs. unbalanced data is not such a problem, xtdcce2 can deal with it.

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                • #23
                  Hi JanDitzen , Thank you so much for your quick response.

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