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Original Articles

Fractional integration and impulse responses: a bivariate application to real output in the USA and four Scandinavian countries

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Pages 71-85 | Received 08 May 2008, Accepted 11 Aug 2009, Published online: 04 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

This article analyzes impulse response functions in the context of vector fractionally integrated time series. We derive analytically the restrictions required to identify the structural-form system. As an illustration of the recommended procedure, we carry out an empirical application based on a bivariate system including real output in the USA and, in turn, in one of the four Scandinavian countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden). The empirical results appear to be sensitive, to some extent, to the specification of the stochastic process driving the disturbances, but generally a positive shock to US output has a positive effect on the Scandinavian countries, which tend to disappear in the long run.

JEL Classification :

Acknowledgements

L.A. Gil-Alana gratefully acknowledges financial support from the Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnologia (ECO2008-03035 ECON Y FINANZAS, Spain). Useful comments of the editor and two anonymous referees are gratefully acknowledged.

Notes

An I(0) vector process is defined as a covariance stationary vector process with spectral density matrix F(λ) that is finite and positive definite.

Note that A=(a, c) T , (b, d) T is assumed to be non-singular (Section 1), so the inversion exists.

Essentially, the two procedures are equivalent. Gil-Alana Citation9 Citation10 is based on the frequency domain while Nielsen Citation24 develops similar tests in the time domain.

The choice of 0.01 increments is arbitrary. We also conducted the tests with 0.001 increments and though the proportion of non-rejection values was clearly higher, the results were completely in line with those reported in .

Using 0.001 increments, the estimated values were (0.602, 0.657) for Denmark; (0.600, 0.633) for Finland; (0.581, 0.632) for Sweden; and (0.578, 0.664) for Norway.

Using 0.001 increments, the values were (1.313, 0.644) for Denmark; (1.221, 0.730) for Finland; (1.078, 0.973) for Sweden; and (1.171, 0.773) for Norway, and very similar results were obtained using Nielsen’s Citation23 likelihood approach.

Higher VAR orders were also considered and the results did not substantially differ from those based on a VAR(1) model. Though it is quite common in applied work to determine the VAR lag order based on information-based order selection criteria Citation13 Citation25 Citation34, it has not yet been theoretically justified in the context of fractional integration.

The use of other likelihood criteria like the Akaike information criterion (AIC) and Bayesian information criterion (BIC) lead essentially to the same results in favour of the white noise specification. Note, however, that these criteria may not necessarily be optimal for applications involving fractional differences, as these criteria focus on the short-term forecasting ability of the fitted model and may not give sufficient attention to the long-run properties of the autoregressive fractionally integrated moving average (ARFIMA) models Citation16 Citation17.

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