登录 注册

Bandwidth Selection for Spatial HAC Standard Errors

🔗 访问原文
🔗 Access Paper

📝 摘要
Abstract

Spatial autocorrelation in regression models can lead to downward biased standard errors and thus incorrect inference. The most common correction in applied economics is the spatial heteroskedasticity and autocorrelation consistent (HAC) standard error estimator introduced by Conley (1999). A critical input is the kernel bandwidth: the distance within which residuals are allowed to be correlated. However, this is still an unresolved problem and there is no formal guidance in the literature. In this paper, I first document that the relationship between the bandwidth and the magnitude of spatial HAC standard errors is inverse-U shaped. This implies that both too narrow and too wide bandwidths lead to underestimated standard errors, contradicting the conventional wisdom that wider bandwidths yield more conservative inference. I then propose a simple, non-parametric, data-driven bandwidth selector based on the empirical covariogram of regression residuals. In extensive Monte Carlo experiments calibrated to empirically relevant spatial correlation structures across the contiguous United States, I show that the proposed method controls the false positive rate at or near the nominal 5% level across a wide range of spatial correlation intensities and sample configurations. I compare six kernel functions and find that the Bartlett and Epanechnikov kernels deliver the best size control. An empirical application using U.S. county-level data illustrates the practical relevance of the method. The R package SpatialInference implements the proposed bandwidth selection method.

📊 文章统计
Article Statistics

基础数据
Basic Stats

183 浏览
Views
0 下载
Downloads
36 引用
Citations

引用趋势
Citation Trend

阅读国家分布
Country Distribution

阅读机构分布
Institution Distribution

月度浏览趋势
Monthly Views

相关关键词
Related Keywords

影响因子分析
Impact Analysis

8.30 综合评分
Overall Score
引用影响力
Citation Impact
浏览热度
View Popularity
下载频次
Download Frequency

📄 相关文章
Related Articles