Wooldridge problem 46 in section 45 we used as an example


1. Wooldridge Problem 4.6 In section 4.5, we used as an example testing the rationality of assessments of housing prices. There, we used a log-log model in price and assess [see equation (4.47)]. Here, we use a level-level formulation. i. In the simple regression model Price = ?0 + ?1assess + u the assessment is rational if ?1 = 1 and ?0 = 0. The estimated equation is price= -14.47 + .976assess (16.27) (.049) n = 88, SSR = 165,644.51, R2 = .820. First, test the hypothesis that H0: ?0 = 0 against the two-sided alternative. Then, test H0: ?1 = 1 against the two-sided alternative. What do you conclude? ii. To test the joint hypothesis that H0: ?0 = 0 and H0: ?1 = 1, we need the SSR in the restricted model. This amounts to computing price assess)2 where n = 88, since the residuals in the restricted model are just price assess.. (No estimation is needed for the restricted model because both parameters are specified under H0.) This turns out to yield SSR = 209,448.99. Carry out the F test for the joint hypothesis. iii. Now, test H0: ?2 = 0, ?3 = 0, and ?4 = 0 in the model Price = ?0 + ?1assess + ?2lotsize + ?3sqrft + ?4bdrms + u The R-squared from estimating this model using the same 88 houses is .829. iv. If the variance of price changes with assesses, lot size, sqrft, or bdrms, what can you say about the F test from part (iii)?

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Business Economics: Wooldridge problem 46 in section 45 we used as an example
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