Volume 40, Issue 2 pp. 487-508
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Bootstrap Testing in Nonlinear Models

Russell Davidson

Russell Davidson

GREQAM, France, and Queen's University, Canada [email protected]

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James G. MacKinnon

James G. MacKinnon

Queen's University, Canada [email protected]

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First published: 25 December 2001
Citations: 63

Abstract

Bootstrap testing of nonlinear models normally requires at least one nonlinear estimation for every bootstrap sample. We show how to reduce computational costs by performing only a fixed, small number of Newton or quasi-Newton steps for each bootstrap sample. The number of steps is smaller for likelihood ratio tests than for other types of classical tests and smaller for Newton's method than for quasi-Newton methods. The suggested procedures are applied to tests of slope coefficients in the tobit model and to tests of common factor restrictions. In both cases, bootstrap tests work well, and very few steps are needed.

Footnotes

  • This research was supported, in part, by grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. We are grateful to Joel Horowitz, two referees, and seminar participants at the Universities of British Columbia, Guelph, Montreal, and Rochester, the ESRC Econometric Study Group Conference at Bristol University, and the European Meeting of the Econometric Society at Toulouse for comments on earlier versions.
    • The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.