Instrumental Variables in the Long Run

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Instrumental Variables in the Long Run. / Casey, Gregory; Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag.

2017.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Casey, G & Klemp, MPB 2017 'Instrumental Variables in the Long Run'. <https://www.economics.ku.dk/research/publications/wp/dp_2017/1716.pdf>

APA

Casey, G., & Klemp, M. P. B. (2017). Instrumental Variables in the Long Run. University of Copenhagen. Institute of Economics. Discussion Papers (Online) Nr. 17-16 https://www.economics.ku.dk/research/publications/wp/dp_2017/1716.pdf

Vancouver

Casey G, Klemp MPB. Instrumental Variables in the Long Run. 2017.

Author

Casey, Gregory ; Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag. / Instrumental Variables in the Long Run. 2017. (University of Copenhagen. Institute of Economics. Discussion Papers (Online); Nr. 17-16).

Bibtex

@techreport{bf8518c745fe4178b3d38eb14de4f6ad,
title = "Instrumental Variables in the Long Run",
abstract = "In the study of long-run economic growth, it is common to use historical or geographical variables as instruments for contemporary endogenous regressors. We study the interpretation of these conventional instrumental variable (IV) regressions in a general, yet simple, framework. Our aim is to estimate the long-run causal effect of changes in the endogenous explanatory variable. We find that conventional IV regressions generally cannot recover this parameter of interest. To estimate this parameter, therefore, we develop an augmented IV estimator that combines the conventional regression with a separate regression estimating the degree of persistence in the endogenous regressor. Importantly, our estimator can overcome a particular violation of the exclusion restriction that can arise when there is a time gap between the instrument and the endogenous explanatory variable. We apply our results to estimate the long-run effect of institutions on economic performance and the long-run effect of Protestantism on human capital accumulation. In both cases, we find economically significant long-run effects that are smaller than those in the existing literature, demonstrating that our results have important quantitative implications for the field of long-run economic growth. We also use our framework to examine related empirical techniques. We find that two prominent regression methodologies - using gravity-based instruments for trade and including ancestry-adjusted variables in linear regression models - have related issues of interpretation. In the latter case, this problem can be overcome by including both unadjusted and adjusted measures in the regression model.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Long-Run Economic Growth, Instrumental Variable Regression",
author = "Gregory Casey and Klemp, {Marc Patrick Brag}",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
series = "University of Copenhagen. Institute of Economics. Discussion Papers (Online)",
number = "17-16",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Instrumental Variables in the Long Run

AU - Casey, Gregory

AU - Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - In the study of long-run economic growth, it is common to use historical or geographical variables as instruments for contemporary endogenous regressors. We study the interpretation of these conventional instrumental variable (IV) regressions in a general, yet simple, framework. Our aim is to estimate the long-run causal effect of changes in the endogenous explanatory variable. We find that conventional IV regressions generally cannot recover this parameter of interest. To estimate this parameter, therefore, we develop an augmented IV estimator that combines the conventional regression with a separate regression estimating the degree of persistence in the endogenous regressor. Importantly, our estimator can overcome a particular violation of the exclusion restriction that can arise when there is a time gap between the instrument and the endogenous explanatory variable. We apply our results to estimate the long-run effect of institutions on economic performance and the long-run effect of Protestantism on human capital accumulation. In both cases, we find economically significant long-run effects that are smaller than those in the existing literature, demonstrating that our results have important quantitative implications for the field of long-run economic growth. We also use our framework to examine related empirical techniques. We find that two prominent regression methodologies - using gravity-based instruments for trade and including ancestry-adjusted variables in linear regression models - have related issues of interpretation. In the latter case, this problem can be overcome by including both unadjusted and adjusted measures in the regression model.

AB - In the study of long-run economic growth, it is common to use historical or geographical variables as instruments for contemporary endogenous regressors. We study the interpretation of these conventional instrumental variable (IV) regressions in a general, yet simple, framework. Our aim is to estimate the long-run causal effect of changes in the endogenous explanatory variable. We find that conventional IV regressions generally cannot recover this parameter of interest. To estimate this parameter, therefore, we develop an augmented IV estimator that combines the conventional regression with a separate regression estimating the degree of persistence in the endogenous regressor. Importantly, our estimator can overcome a particular violation of the exclusion restriction that can arise when there is a time gap between the instrument and the endogenous explanatory variable. We apply our results to estimate the long-run effect of institutions on economic performance and the long-run effect of Protestantism on human capital accumulation. In both cases, we find economically significant long-run effects that are smaller than those in the existing literature, demonstrating that our results have important quantitative implications for the field of long-run economic growth. We also use our framework to examine related empirical techniques. We find that two prominent regression methodologies - using gravity-based instruments for trade and including ancestry-adjusted variables in linear regression models - have related issues of interpretation. In the latter case, this problem can be overcome by including both unadjusted and adjusted measures in the regression model.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Long-Run Economic Growth

KW - Instrumental Variable Regression

M3 - Working paper

T3 - University of Copenhagen. Institute of Economics. Discussion Papers (Online)

BT - Instrumental Variables in the Long Run

ER -

ID: 182541258