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Testul de cointegrare Maki×Panel DF-GLS×Testul Panel KSS×
DomeniuEconometrieEconometrieEconometrie
FamilieRegression modelRegression modelRegression model
Anul apariției201219961992
Autorul originalDarshana MakiElliott, Rothenberg, and Stock (adapted to panels)Kwiatkowski, Phillips, Schmidt, and Shin (panel version by Hadri)
TipStructural-break testStationarity testUnit-root test
Sursa seminalăMaki, D. (2012). Tests for cointegration allowing for an unknown number of breaks. Economic Modelling, 29(5), 2011-2015. DOI ↗Elliott, G., Rothenberg, T. J., & Stock, J. H. (1996). Efficient tests for an autoregressive unit root. Econometric Reviews, 13(4), 469-497. DOI ↗Kwiatkowski, D., Phillips, P. C., Schmidt, P., & Shin, Y. (1992). Testing the null hypothesis of stationarity against the alternative of a unit root. Journal of Econometrics, 54(1-3), 159-178. DOI ↗
Denumiri alternativeStructural-break cointegration testPanel unit-root testPanel stationarity test
Înrudite333
RezumatThe Maki cointegration test extends cointegration testing to allow for an unknown number of endogenously-determined structural breaks in the cointegrating relationship. Introduced by Maki (2012), it builds on Gregory and Hansen (1996), enabling detection of cointegration even when relationships shift due to policy changes, institutional reforms, or fundamental regime shifts. This is essential for applied time-series work where structural change is common.Panel DF-GLS extends the Elliott, Rothenberg, and Stock (1996) GLS unit-root test to panel data, combining cross-sectional and time-series information to test whether variables contain unit roots. Introduced by Hadri and colleagues (2005), it is more powerful than standard panel unit-root tests (IPS, LLC) due to its GLS detrending approach. This test is essential for establishing stationarity before fitting cointegration or dynamic panel models.The Panel KSS test reverses the null hypothesis of unit-root tests: it tests whether variables are stationary (stationarity is the null) versus nonstationary (unit root is the alternative). Introduced by Kwiatkowski et al. (1992) and extended to panels by Hadri (2000), this complementary approach provides robustness when combined with unit-root tests like Panel DF-GLS. Using both tests together reduces the risk of erroneous conclusions about variable persistence.
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ScholarGateCompară metode: Maki Cointegration Test · Panel DF-GLS · Panel KSS. Preluat la 2026-06-19 de pe https://scholargate.app/ro/compare