Spurious Inference in the GARCH (1,1) Model When It Is Weakly Identified

Jun Ma, University of Washington
Charles R. Nelson, University of Washington
Richard Startz, University of Washington

Abstract

This paper shows that the Zero-Information-Limit-Condition (ZILC) formulated by Nelson and Startz (2006) holds in the GARCH (1,1) model. As a result, the GARCH estimate tends to have too small a standard error relative to the true one when the ARCH parameter is small, even when sample size becomes very large. In combination with an upward bias in the GARCH estimate, the small standard error will often lead to the spurious inference that volatility is highly persistent when it is not. We develop an empirical strategy to deal with this issue and show how it applies to real datasets.

Recommended Citation

Jun Ma, Charles R. Nelson, and Richard Startz (2007) "Spurious Inference in the GARCH (1,1) Model When It Is Weakly Identified", Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics & Econometrics: Vol. 11: No. 1, Article 1.
http://www.bepress.com/snde/vol11/iss1/art1

Related Files

ma_datacode.zip (40 kB)
Data and code

 
 
 
 

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