A Note on the Topology of the First Stage of 2SLS with Many Instruments

06/28/2021
by   Guy Tchuente, et al.
0

The finite sample properties of estimators are usually understood or approximated using asymptotic theories. Two main asymptotic constructions have been used to characterize the presence of many instruments. The first assumes that the number of instruments increases with the sample size. I demonstrate that in this case, one of the key assumptions used in the asymptotic construction may imply that the number of “effective" instruments should be finite, resulting in an internal contradiction. The second asymptotic representation considers that the number of instrumental variables (IVs) may be finite, infinite, or even a continuum. The number does not change with the sample size. In this scenario, the regularized estimator obtained depends on the topology imposed on the set of instruments as well as on a regularization parameter. These restrictions may induce a bias or restrict the set of admissible instruments. However, the assumptions are internally coherent. The limitations of many IVs asymptotic assumptions provide support for finite sample distributional studies to better understand the behavior of many IV estimators.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
12/21/2022

Partly Linear Instrumental Variables Regressions without Smoothing on the Instruments

We consider a semiparametric partly linear model identified by instrumen...
research
09/10/2018

Non-Asymptotic Inference in Instrumental Variables Estimation

This paper presents a simple method for carrying out inference in a wide...
research
08/14/2018

Estimating the size of a hidden finite set: large-sample behavior of estimators

A finite set is "hidden" if its elements are not directly enumerable or ...
research
12/15/2022

Comparing two spatial variables with the probability of agreement

Computing the agreement between two continuous sequences is of great int...
research
02/03/2022

Exploiting Independent Instruments: Identification and Distribution Generalization

Instrumental variable models allow us to identify a causal function betw...
research
11/26/2017

Calibration Concordance for Astronomical Instruments via Multiplicative Shrinkage

Calibration data are often obtained by observing several well-understood...
research
12/29/2018

High-dimensional instrumental variables regression and confidence sets - v2/2012

This was a revision of arXiv:1105.2454v1 from 2012. It considers a varia...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset