Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Aren't they going to look the same other than scale? 72 virtually identical graphs will look rather uninteresting no matter how you arrange them. You can't combine them on a single graph or they'll just smear together. Maybe just graph a few representatives.
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Hi Tom,
Is this correct?
Thanks a ton for all your help.
Kind Regards
Is this correct?
Code: Select all
dec rect[series] Z(N,1)
do i=1,N
set Z(i,1) = lambda(i,1)*goodresp(t)(k,3)
end do iKind Regards
Last edited by RK2509 on Wed Feb 17, 2016 1:25 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
I know they'll pretty much look the same. But that would always be the case when we try to analyse the shock on 72 food prices through the latent factor lambda. I would perhaps go with a few graphs as you advised.
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Would it be incorrect to try to interpret Uhilg's shock in terms of the federal funds rate? In other words, how does shock generated by sign restriction compare to a 50 basis point fed funds shock?
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
I guess you could do that. However, note that the "size" of a shock in the Uhlig procedure is determined by it being an impulse vector (column out of a factorization of the covariance matrix) and not any specific impact on any variable.
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
One follow up, which is not necessarily related to code. What would be the implication of Uhlig remaining agnostic about the price level (GDP deflator) as well?
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
If you're talking about multiple shocks, have you looked at Mountford and Uhlig?
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Not multiple shocks, less restrictions. Being agnostic about output and the price level.
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Fewer restrictions? Then you might end up with a smear of very different shocks. There's a fine line between having enough restrictions to actually "identify" the desired behavior and so many that no shocks actually satisfy them.
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
In regards to code you posted for Uhlig 2005, is the behavior of the federal funds rate in the impulse vector consistent with a 50 basis point federal funds rate shock under recursive estimation?
In other words, if I want to compare the results generated by this code to results from the recursive approach. Can I make straight forward comparisons? Would the one standard deviation shock to the impulse vector coincide with a 50 basis point increase in the federal funds rate?
In other words, if I want to compare the results generated by this code to results from the recursive approach. Can I make straight forward comparisons? Would the one standard deviation shock to the impulse vector coincide with a 50 basis point increase in the federal funds rate?
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Didn't you already ask that?
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Sort of, but is it not possible to make sure that the federal fund rate change is consistent across both methods?
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
It's a sign restriction, not a size restriction. Although you can generate a sign-restricted impulse vector and then scale it to have a specific impact, that completely alters the probability. For instance, if you have an accepted impulse vector with a .05 impact on the FFR and you scale it up to .50, you're now taking a 10 standard deviation shock which should have probability effectively zero.
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
Dear Tom,
I have bit of confusion in Uhligh1.rpf.
First , if I want to give shock to the real GDP , that is the first variable, do I make the following changes,
*****
if atest(1)<0
compute a=-1.0*a
******
also if I want to want to give it a negative shock , do I change the following things;
*******
if atest(1)<0
compute a=1.0*a
*********
Many thanks
Rosen
I have bit of confusion in Uhligh1.rpf.
First , if I want to give shock to the real GDP , that is the first variable, do I make the following changes,
*****
if atest(1)<0
compute a=-1.0*a
******
also if I want to want to give it a negative shock , do I change the following things;
*******
if atest(1)<0
compute a=1.0*a
*********
Many thanks
Rosen
Re: Uhlig JME 2005 Sign-Restricted IRF's for VAR
I'm not sure what you mean by "give a shock to real GDP". That's not how sign restrictions work.