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Bayesian NARDL×Modelo de Arrastre Autorregresivo Distribuido No Lineal de Panel (Panel NARDL)×
CampoEconometríaEconometría
FamiliaRegression modelRegression model
Año de origen2014 (NARDL); Bayesian extension c. 2015–20202014–2018
Autor originalShin, Yu & Greenwood-Nimmo (NARDL base); Bayesian extension developed in subsequent applied literatureShin, Yu & Greenwood-Nimmo (2014), extended to panel settings by subsequent authors
TipoNonlinear cointegrating model with Bayesian inferenceNonlinear dynamic panel model
Fuente seminalShin, Y., Yu, B., & Greenwood-Nimmo, M. (2014). Modelling asymmetric cointegration and dynamic multipliers in a nonlinear ARDL framework. In W. C. Horrace & R. C. Sickles (Eds.), Festschrift in Honor of Peter Schmidt: Econometric Methods and Applications (pp. 281–314). Springer. link ↗Shin, Y., Yu, B., & Greenwood-Nimmo, M. (2014). Modelling asymmetric cointegration and dynamic multipliers in a nonlinear ARDL framework. In R. C. Sickles & W. C. Horrace (Eds.), Festschrift in Honor of Peter Schmidt (pp. 281–314). Springer. DOI ↗
AliasBayesian NARDL, Bayesian nonlinear ARDL, Bayesian asymmetric ARDL, B-NARDLPanel Nonlinear ARDL, panel asymmetric ARDL, panel NARDL bounds test, nonlinear panel cointegration model
Relacionados64
ResumenBayesian NARDL combines the Nonlinear Autoregressive Distributed Lag framework of Shin, Yu, and Greenwood-Nimmo (2014) with Bayesian posterior inference. It models asymmetric long-run cointegration — allowing positive and negative shocks to a regressor to have different equilibrium effects — while incorporating prior knowledge and producing full posterior distributions over all parameters, including the asymmetry gap.Panel NARDL extends the time-series NARDL framework of Shin, Yu and Greenwood-Nimmo (2014) to a panel data setting, allowing researchers to detect asymmetric long-run and short-run relationships between variables across multiple cross-sections simultaneously. By decomposing the regressor into positive and negative partial sums, the model tests whether increases and decreases in an explanatory variable have different effects on the outcome.
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  1. v1
  2. 2 Fuentes
  3. PUBLISHED

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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Bayesian NARDL · Panel NARDL. Recuperado el 2026-06-15 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare