Some recent developments in predictive accuracy testing with nested models and (generic) nonlinear alternatives

Some recent developments in predictive accuracy testing with nested models and (generic) nonlinear alternatives

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Article ID: iaor2005791
Country: Netherlands
Volume: 20
Issue: 2
Start Page Number: 185
End Page Number: 199
Publication Date: Apr 2004
Journal: International Journal of Forecasting
Authors: ,
Abstract:

Forecasters and applied econometricians are often interested in comparing the predictive accuracy of nested competing models. A leading example of nestedness is when predictive ability is equated with “out-of-sample Granger causality”. In particular, it is often of interest to assess whether historical data from one variable are useful when constructing a forecasting model for another variable, and hence our use of terminology such as “out-of-sample Granger causality”, In this paper, we examine and discuss three key issues one is faced with when constructing predictive accuracy tests, namely: the contribution of parameter estimation error (PEE), the choice of linear versus nonlinear models, and the issue of (dynamic) misspecification, with primary focus on the latter of these issues. One of our main conclusions is that there are a number of easy-to-apply statistics constructed using out-of-sample conditional moment conditions which are robust to the presence of dynamic misspecification under both hypotheses. We provide some new Monte Carlo findings and empirical evidence based on the use of such tests. In particular, we analyze the finite sample properties of the consistent out-of-sample test of Corradi and Swanson using data generating processes calibrated with US money and output, and we empirically investigate the (non)linear marginal predictive content of money for output. Our Monte Carlo evidence suggests that the tests perform adequately in finite samples, and our empirical evidence suggests that there is no useful (non)linear information in money growth that is not already contained in lags of output growth, when the objective is output growth prediction.

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