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Nickell Bias in Panel Local Projection: Financial Crises Are Worse Than You Think

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  • Ziwei Mei
  • Liugang Sheng
  • Zhentao Shi

Abstract

Local Projection is widely used for impulse response estimation, with the Fixed Effect (FE) estimator being the default for panel data. This paper highlights the presence of Nickell bias for all regressors in the FE estimator, even if lagged dependent variables are absent in the regression. This bias is the consequence of the inherent panel predictive specification. We recommend using the split-panel jackknife estimator to eliminate the asymptotic bias and restore the standard statistical inference. Revisiting three macro-finance studies on the linkage between financial crises and economic contraction, we find that the FE estimator substantially underestimates the post-crisis economic losses.

Suggested Citation

  • Ziwei Mei & Liugang Sheng & Zhentao Shi, 2023. "Nickell Bias in Panel Local Projection: Financial Crises Are Worse Than You Think," Papers 2302.13455, arXiv.org, revised Oct 2023.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2302.13455
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    Cited by:

    1. Chengwang Liao & Ziwei Mei & Zhentao Shi, 2024. "Nickell Meets Stambaugh: A Tale of Two Biases in Panel Predictive Regressions," Papers 2410.09825, arXiv.org.
    2. Atsushi Inoue & `Oscar Jord`a & Guido M. Kuersteiner, 2023. "Inference for Local Projections," Papers 2306.03073, arXiv.org, revised Aug 2024.
    3. Òscar Jordà & Alan M. Taylor, 2024. "Local Projections," Working Paper Series 2024-24, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

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