Introduction to econometrics II eco 356 faculty of social sciences course guide course Developers: Dr. Adesina-Uthman


The Consequences of Measurement Errors



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Introduction to Econometrics ECO 356 Course Guide and Course Material
4.1.3.4 The Consequences of Measurement Errors
As it is in other human activities, it habitually happens in economics that, when investigating a relationship, the variables involved could be measured defectively. For example, surveys often contain errors caused by the person being interviewed not remembering properly or not understanding the question correctly. However, misreporting is not the only source of inaccuracy. It sometimes happens that you have defined a variable in your model in a certain way, but the available data correspond to a slightly different definition.


INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMETRICS II

ECO 306

NOUN
114
4.1.3.5 Measurement Errors in the Descriptive Variables)
To keep the analysis simple, we will confine it to the simple regression model. Let us suppose that a variable Y depends on a variable Z according to the relationship
…[4.06] wherev is a disturbance term with mean 0 and variance
, distributed independently of Z. We shall suppose that Z cannot be measured absolutely accurately, and we shall use X to denote its measured value. In observation is equal to the true value,
, plus the measurement error,
:
…[4.07] We shall suppose that w has mean 0 and variance
, that Z has population variance, and that w is distributed independently of Z and v.
[4.07] into [4.06], will yield
(
)
…[4.08] Two random components are present in [4.08], the original disturbance term v and the measurement error (multiplied by. Together they form a composite disturbance term, which we shall call u:
…[4.09] Therefore, [4.08] becomes
…[4.10] You have your data on Y (which, for the time being, we shall assume has been measured accurately) and X, and you unsuspectingly regress Y on X. As usual, the regression coefficient b is given by
( )
( )
( )
( )
…[4.11]



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