You are on page 1of 47

Intr oduction

Some programs aimed at reducing juvenile crime are based on the theory that a good way
to keep teenagers out of trouble is to keep them busy and off the streets. These programs include
supervised Saturday and evening sports activities, supervised clubs, and similar programs.
Another way to keep teenagers under supervision is to keep them in school longer.
Here, you will examine the effect on juvenile crime of whether a given day is a school
day (a day that a teenager is supposed to be in school) or a no-school day (a day when a
teenager does not have school).
The measure of juvenile crime is the number of reported incidents of juvenile property
crimes. (Juvenile means under 18 years old. Property crime includes theft and vandalism; it
excludes violent crime and drug offenses.) The data are daily, for weekdays only (no data for
Saturday or Sunday) for 1995 to 1999 for 29 cities in the U.S. with populations between 30,000
and 600,000; an observation corresponds to a day in a city. If data were available for all cities
for all days, the number of observations would be 5 years q 261 weekdays/year q 29 cities =
37,845, but for some cities data are available only for shorter periods of time, so the actual
sample size is n = 27,389.
The variables are defined in Table 1 and regression results are summarized in Table 2.

Table 1
Var iable definitions
Var iable
#incidents

Mean
3.35

breakday

.08

teacherday

.01

summer

.23

pop

1.19

Definition
Daily number of reported incidents of property crime involving a
juvenile offender. Thus #incidents = 4 means that four juvenile
property crime incidents were reported on that day in that city.
= 1 if the day is a school break day (Thanksgiving break, Christmas
break, etc.)
= 0 otherwise
= 1 if the day is a teacher meeting day. A teacher meeting day
normally would be a school day (that is, the day falls in the regular
school year, not in the summer, and is not a school break day),
except no classes are held because the day is used instead for
teacher meetings, professional development, etc.
= 0 otherwise.
= 1 if the day is during summer vacation
= 0 otherwise.
population of the city in hundreds of thousands, so pop = 1.19 means
the city has a population of 119,000.

Table 2
Summar y of Regr ession Results
Dependent variable: #Incidents
Regr essor
teacherday

(1)
.76
(.26)

breakday

(2)

.173
(.114)

summer
pop

(3)
.87
(.23)
.129
(.108)
.292
(.055)
1.58
(0.03)

(4)
.40
(.32)
.129
(.108)
.292
(.055)
1.57
(.03)

pop2
pop3

(5)
.87
(.23)
.142
(.106)
.293
(.055)
4.05
(.17)
-1.51
(.09)
.211
(.012)

.40
(.31)

teacherdayqpop
teacherdayqpop2
teacherdayqpop3
intercept

3.35
3.34
1.39
1.39
.50
(.03)
(.03)
(0.04)
(0.04)
(.09)
F-tests testing the hypothesis that the population coefficients on the indicated regressors are all zero:
teacher day,
7.27
(p < .001)
teacherdayqpop

4.01
(p = .003)

teacher day, teacherdayqpop,


teacherdayqpop2, teacherdayqpop3

1.75
(p = .155)

teacherdayqpop, teacherdayqpop2,
teacherdayqpop3
pop, pop2, and pop3
pop2 and pop3

938.3
(p < .001)
171.5
(p < .001)

919.8
(p < .001)
167.7
(p < .001)
470.2
(p < .001)

.1519
3.85

.1520
3.85

pop, pop2, pop3, teacherdayqpop,


teacherdayqpop2, teacherdayqpop3
R2
SER (Regression RMSE)

(6)
-.82
(.67)
.142
(.108)
.292
(.055)
4.02
(.18)
-1.50
(.09)
.209
(.012)
3.05
(1.53)
-1.21
(.78)
.13
(.10)
.52
(.09)

.0004
4.18

.0001
4.18

.1347
3.89

.1348
3.89

Notes: Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors are given in parentheses under estimated


coefficients, and p-values are given in parentheses under F- statistics. The F-statistics are
heteroskedasticity-robust. All regressions have n = 27,389 observations. The regressions were
estimated using data for weekdays only.

Question 1 (24 points)


The measure of a no-school day used in regression (1) (column (1) in Table 2) is whether the
day is a teacher meeting day. The measure of a no-school day in regression (2) is whether the
day is a break day (Thanksgiving break, etc.).
a) (9 points) For regression (1):
(i) Provide the estimated effect on the number of incidents of having a no-school day.
(ii) Is this estimated effect large in a real-world sense? Briefly, explain.
(iii) Test the hypothesis that this effect is zero, against the alternative that it is nonzero, at
the 5% significance level.
b) (9 points) Repeat (i) (iii) for regression (2)
c) (6 points) Suggest a plausible reason, based on the definitions of the variables in regressions
(1) and (2), why the two estimates differ.
Question 2 (30 points)
a) (6 points) Explain what is meant by the SER in regression (3).
b) (6 points) Interpret the coefficient on teacherday in regression (3).
c) (6 points) Suggest a reason why the errors in regression (3) might be heteroskedastic;
explain.
d) (6 points) Using regression (3), compute the predicted value of the number of incidents on a
teacher meeting day for a city with a population of 200,000 (so pop = 2).
e) (6 points) The school superintendent in a city with population 200,000 is contemplating
changing a normal school day into a teacher meeting day. Use regression (6) (not regression
(3)) to estimate the effect of this decision on the number of juvenile property crime incidents.
Question 3 (26 points)
a) (8 points) One possibility is that pop enters the population regression function nonlinearly.
What does regression (5) tell us about this possibility? Briefly explain (be precise).
b) (8 points) Another possibility is that the effect on crime of a no-school day is different in
bigger cities than in smaller cities. What do the regression results tell us about this
possibility? Briefly explain (be precise).
c) (10 points) In words, briefly summarize your conclusions from Table 2 about the effect on
juvenile property crime of having a no-school day because of a teacher meeting day.
Question 4 (20 points)
a) (10 points) Suggest a policy intervention that is, a specific program to provide teenagers
with some form of supervision for which these results would be externally valid. Suggest a
different policy intervention for which these results would not be externally valid. Explain
(be precise).
b) (10 points) Suggest two potential threats to the internal validity of your conclusions in 3(c).
That is, provide two potential threats to the internal validity of the regression analysis
summarized in Table 2. Explain why each threat could be relevant to this study (be precise).

Department of Economics
Harvard University

Economics 1123
Fall 2005
Midter m Exam
11:40 a.m., Thur sday October 27, 2005

Instr uctions
1. Do not turn this page until so instructed.
2. This exam ends promptly at 1:00 PM.
3. The exam has five parts for a total of 100 points. Please put each par t in a separ ate blue
book. Put your name and Har var d ID number on the cover of each blue book.
4. You are permitted one two-sided 8 x 11 sheet of notes, plus a calculator. No computers
or wireless devices without prior permission. You may not share resources with anyone else.
5. Some questions ask you to draw a real-world judgment in a problem of practical importance.
The quality of that judgment counts. For example, consider the question: It is 10oF outside.
In your judgment, why are so many people wearing heavy coats? The answer, To stay
warm would receive more points than the answer, Because they are fashion-conscious.
6. You may keep or discard this exam, you need not turn it in.

Intr oduction
The reputation of a university depends in part on teaching quality, which is primarily
measured by course evaluations. This exam considers an empirical analysis of course
evaluations for n = 463 courses, sampled for the academic years 2000 2002 at a major U.S.
university (the University of Texas at Austin). The objective of the study is to quantify the
causal effect on professorial productivity, as measured by course evaluations, of the physical
appearance of the instructor (Beauty). The dependent variable is the Course Overall course
evaluation rating, on a scale of 1 (very unsatisfactory) to 5 (excellent) (the same question and
scale as at Harvard).
The physical appearance (Beauty) of the instructor was measured by a paid panel of six
students, working independently, who assigned a numeric grade to the physical appearance of all
the instructors in the data set based on photographs on the instructors Web sites. The panelists
were told to focus on physical characteristics and to make their ratings independent of age. The
six grades were averaged, centered, and rescaled so that the average score for Beauty across all
instructors is zero. Other relevant data were also collected.

Table 1
Var iable Definitions and Summar y Statistics
Var iable
Course Overall
Beauty
DBeauty>0

Definition
Course overall teaching evaluation score, on a scale of 1 (very unsatisfactory) to
5 (excellent)
Rating of instructor physical appearance by a panel of six students, averaged
across the six panelists, shifted to have mean zero.
-1 if Beauty ! 0

0 if Beauty d 0

Mean
4.022

Std. Dev.
.525

.83

.51

.50

Female

-1 if the instructor is female

0 if the instructor is male

.36

.48

Minority

-1 if the instructor is a non-White

0 if the instructor is White

.10

.30

-1 if the instructor is not a native English speaker

0 if the instructor is a native English speaker

.04

.20

tenure track

-1 if the instructor is in a tenure-track job (Asst., Assoc., Full Professor)

0 if the instructor is not in a tenure-track job (lecturer)

.85

.36

intro course

-1 if the course is introductory (mainly large Freshman and Sophomore courses)

0 if the course is not introductory

.34

.47

-1 if the course is a single-credit elective (yoga, aerobics, dance, etc.)

0 otherwise

.03

.17

-1 if the instructor is wearing a tie in his Web photo (male) or

is wearing a blouse and jacket in her Web photo (female)


0 otherwise

.31

.46

Non-native English

one-credit course
dresses well

Table 2
Regr ession Results
Dependent variable: Course Overall evaluation score
(1)
All
instructors

(2)
All
instructors

(3)
All
instructors

(4)
All
instructors

(5)
Male
instructors

(6)
Female
instructors

.410
(.081)
-.166
(.098)
-.284
(.015)
-.344
(.152)
-.150
(.114)
-.071
(.134)

.275
(.059)
-.239
(.085)
-.249
(.012)
-.253
(.134)
-.136
(.094)
-.046
(.111)
.687
(.166)

.229
(.047)
-.210
(.075)
-.206
(.014)
-.288
(.112)
-.156
(.110)
-.079
(.102)
.823
(.129)

.237
(.096)
-.255
(.088)
-.221
(.012)
-.251
(.132)
-.131
(.092)
-.052
(.110)
.694
(.170)

.384
(.076)

.128
(.064)

.060
(.101)
-.427
(.143)
-.056
(.089)
.005
(.129)
.768
(.119)

-.260
(.139)
-.262
(.151)
-.041
(.133)
-.228
(.164)
.517
(.232)

BeautyuDBeauty>0

.243
(.088)

Intercept

4.27
(.071)

4.25
(0.56)

4.22
(.054)

.081
(.135)
4.21
(.054)

4.35
(.081)

4.08
(.088)

.224
463

.279
463

.302
463

.285
463

.359
268

.162
195

Data subset:
Regr essor
Beauty
Female
Minority
Non-native English
tenure track
intro course
one-credit course
(yoga, aerobics,
dance, short
electives)
dresses well

Summary statistics
R2
n

Notes: Each column represents a different regression. Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors


are given in parentheses under estimated coefficients.

Par t 1 (25 points)


1)

(5 points) Interpret the coefficient on Beauty in regression (2).

2)

(5 points) Using regression (2), compute a 95% confidence interval for the population
coefficient on Beauty.

3)

(5 points) Define a 95% confidence interval.

4)

(5 points) Professor Stock is male, not a minority, is a native English speaker, and is tenure
track. Ec1123 is not an introductory course, nor is it a one-credit elective. Suppose that
Professor Stock has average beauty, so his value of Beauty is zero. Use regression (2) to
compute the predicted course overall course evaluation score for Ec1123 this semester.

5)

(5 points) The professor in Ec1123 next semester is a tenure-track white male Australian.
Suppose he has a Beauty score of 1.66. Use regression (2) to compute a 95% confidence
interval for the difference between the Ec1123 Course Overall evaluation score next
semester and the Course Overall score this semester.

Par t 2 (24 points)


1)

Suppose you want to estimate a version of regression (2) in which the coefficients on all
regressors except Beauty are the same for men and women, however the effect of Beauty
can differ for men and women.
a) (4 points) Provide a regression specification that achieves this (be specific).
b) (2 points) In your specification in (a), how would you test the hypothesis that the effect
of Beauty is the same for men and women (be specific)?

2)

The coefficient on Beauty drops from .410 in regression (1) to .275 in regression (2).
a) (4 points) Explain why. What does this drop imply about the relation between Beauty
and One-credit course?
b) (4 points) Is your reason in (a) for this decline plausible in a real-world sense?
Explain.

3)

The following variables are not in regression (2):


a) The amount of time the instructor spends on course preparation per class.
b) The marital status of the instructor.
For each, explain whether omission of this variable from regression (2) will, in your
judgment, plausibly result in omitted variable bias for the estimated effect of Beauty.
Briefly explain. (5 points each)
4

Par t 3 (21 points)


1)

Suppose you have data on years of teaching experience (Experience) of the instructor, and
you are considering choosing among three possible specifications:
(i) regression (2) plus Experience
(ii) regression (2) plus Experience, Experience2, and Experience3
(iii) regression (2) plus log(Experience)
a)

(6 points) In your judgment (before you know the results of these regressions), which
specification, (i), (ii), or (iii), is the most appropriate? Explain.
b) (4 points) Suppose you estimated regressions for specifications (i) and (ii). How would
you decide, based on the empirical evidence, whether (i) or (ii) is more appropriate.

2)

Consider regression (4).


a) (2 points) Test, at the 5% level, the hypothesis that the coefficient on BeautyuDBeauty>0
is zero, against the alternative that it is nonzero.
b) (4 points) In real-world terms, describe the null hypothesis you just tested, the
alternative, and the conclusion you draw from the hypothesis test.

3)

(5 points) Test (at the 5% significance level) the hypothesis that the effect on course
evaluations of Beauty is the same for men and for women, against the alternative that these
effects differ.

Par t 4 (14 points)


1)

(6 points) Suppose you have data on marital status of the instructor (the data record three
possibilities: single and never married, single and divorced, married). Provide a regression
specification that modifies (2) so as to control for marital status (be specific).

2)

(8 points) Based on the facts given in the following statement and on the empirical results
presented in Table 2, in your judgment is the conclusion in the following statement justified
or not? Explain.
Regression (2) does not control for innate teaching ability. To do so, I obtained data
on the instructors average teaching evaluations in the previous year and added it to
regression (2). The coefficient on Beauty fell to .051 and was not statistically
significant (SE = .079). Therefore I conclude that the Beauty coefficient in regression
(2) is subject to omitted variable bias and that the true causal effect on course
evaluations of Beauty is effectively zero.

Par t 5 (16 points)


A FAS committee on improving undergraduate teaching needs your help before reporting to
Dean Kirby. The committee seeks your advice, as an econometric expert, about whether FAS
should take physical appearance into account when hiring teaching faculty. (This is legal as long
as doing so is blind to race, religion, age, and gender.) You do not have time to collect your own
data so you must base your recommendations on the regression results in Table 2. Based on
your analysis of Table 2, what is your advice? Justify your advice based on a careful and
complete assessment of the internal and external validity of the results in Table 2.
Notes on Part 5:
x Assume the committee knows econometrics and econometric jargon at the level of this
course.
x The committee has experts on ethics, law, and university policy, and it is uninterested in
your views about the ethics or practicality of this proposed policy, whether the university
should be in the business of maximizing course evaluation ratings, etc.; not that these are
unimportant issues, they are simply not the question asked of you.

Department of Economics
Harvard University

Economics 1123
Fall 2006
Midter m Exam
11:40 a.m., Thur sday October 26, 2006

Instr uctions
1. Do not turn this page until so instructed.
2. This exam ends promptly at 1:00 PM.
3. The exam has four parts for a total of 100 points. Please put each par t in a separ ate blue
book. Put your name and Har var d ID number on the cover of each blue book.
4. You are permitted one two-sided 8 x 11 sheet of notes, plus a calculator. No computers,
wireless, or other electronic devices without prior permission. You may not share resources
with anyone else.
5. Some questions ask you to draw a real-world judgment in a problem of practical importance.
The quality of that judgment counts. For example, consider the question: It is 10oF outside.
In your judgment, why are so many people wearing heavy coats? The answer, To stay
warm would receive more points than the answer, Because they are fashion-conscious.
6. You may keep or discard this exam, you need not turn it in.

Intr oduction
Many concerned college administrators view binge drinking by college students as a
problem. Binge drinking can lead to other risky behavior or, in rare cases, death by drunk
driving or alcohol poisoning. Some of these concerned college administrators think that the
Greek system fraternities for men, sororities for women promotes a culture that encourages
binge drinking. According to this Animal House view, the elimination of fraternities and
sororities (and their replacement with dorm or off-campus housing) would go a long ways
towards solving the problem of binge drinking among college students.
In this exam, you will examine the link between the Greek system and binge drinking
using data from the National College Health Risk Behavior Survey, a survey conducted in 1995
by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. The study randomly selected individuals from 136
randomly selected two- and four-year colleges. The survey was mailed to the selected students,
who filled it in and returned it by mail; the response rate was 65%. The data used here are for n
= 1333 students at four-year colleges only.
1

Table 1
Var iable Definitions and Summar y Statistics
Data source: 1995 National College Health Risk Behavior Survey

Var iable
binge30

alcohol30
Greek
female
age
sports

Definition

Mean

Min

Max

2.35

Std.
Dev.
4.04

number of days out of the last 30 days in which the


student binge drank, defined as consuming at least five
alcoholic drinks (e.g. five bottles of beer) in two hours
number of days out of the last 30 days in which the
student consumed any alcohol
-1 if student belongs to a sorority or fraternity

0 otherwise

25

5.12

5.94

30

0.19

0.39

-1 if female

0 if male
age of student in years
-1 if on a sports team (intramural or intercollegiate)

0 otherwise

0.59

0.49

20.33
0.32

1.56
0.47

18
0

24
1

Freshman

-1 if Freshman

0 otherwise

0.21

0.40

Sophomore

-1 if Sophomore

0 otherwise

0.25

0.43

Junior

-1 if Junior

0 otherwise

0.24

0.43

Black

-1 if Black

0 otherwise

0.14

0.34

-1 if Hispanic, Asian, or other non-White, non-Black

0 otherwise

0.20

0.40

Hispanic
/other

Table 2. Binge Dr inking and Fr ater nity/Sor or ity Member ship: Regr ession Results
Dependent variable: binge30
(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

(6)

age2

1.87**
(.32)
-1.33**
(.23)
.02
(.06)
__

1.62**
(.32)
-1.01**
(.23)
.05
(.06)
__

1.48**
(.31)
-.96**
(.23)
.09
(.10)
__

2.69**
(.56)
-.59*
(.24)
.09
(.10)
__

.37*
(.18)
-.25+
(.14)
.01
(.07)
__

Greek u female

__

__

__

1.47**
(.31)
-.97**
(.23)
3.53+
(1.81)
-.081
(.062)
__

__

alcohol30

__

__

__

__

-2.06**
(.66)
__

sports

__

1.29**
(.26)
__

Regressor:
Greek
female
age

1.15**
1.16**
1.07**
(.25)
(.25)
(.25)
Freshman
__
.35
.70
.38
(.48)
(.55)
(.48)
Sophomore
__
__
.00
.08
.03
(.36)
(.36)
(.36)
Junior
__
__
.22
.14
.24
(.34)
(.34)
(.33)
Black
__
__
-2.08**
-2.09**
-2.12**
(.24)
(.24)
(.24)
Hispanic/other
__
__
-1.54**
-1.52**
-1.55**
(.22)
(.22)
(.22)
Intercept
2.40
1.16
.91
-34.96
1.68
(1.31)
(1.36)
(2.28)
(19.26)
(2.27)
F-statistics testing the hypothesis that the population coefficients on the indicated
regressors are all zero:
age, age2
__
__
__
1.95
__
(.142)
Freshman, Sophomore,
__
__
.53
.96
.53
Junior
(.663)
(.413)
(.659)
Black, Hispanic/other
__
__
46.01
45.89
46.80
(<.0001)
(<.0001)
(<.0001)
Regression summary statistics:
R2
.061
.081
.125
.128
.135
2
.059
.078
.119
.121
.128
R
SER
n

3.919
1333

3.879
1333

3.791
1333

3.788
1333

3.772
1333

.54**
(.02)
.41**
(.15)
.76**
(.29)
.36
(.22)
.46*
(.20)
-.33+
(.17)
-.32*
(.15)
-.92
(1.44)

__
2.81
(.038)
3.45
(
)
.672
.670
2.322
1333

Notes: Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors are given in parentheses under estimated


coefficients, and p-values are given in parentheses under F- statistics. The F-statistics are
heteroskedasticity-robust. Coefficients are individually statistically significant at the +10%,
*5%, **1% significance level.

Par t 1 (25 points)


1)

(5 points) Interpret the coefficient on Greek in regression (1).

2)

(5 points) Explain why the coefficient on Greek decreases from regression (1) to regression
(2).

3)

(5 points) Define heteroskedasticity and suggest a reason why the error in regression (3)
might be heteroskedastic.

4)

(5 points) Using regression (3), predict the number of binge-drinking days in a 30-day
period for an 18-year old white male Freshman who belongs to a fraternity and is on a
sports team.

5)

(5 points) All the respondents are either Freshmen, Sophomores, Juniors, or Seniors, yet
Freshman, Sophomore, Junior, age, and the constant regressor (the intercept) are not
perfectly multicollinear in regression (3). Describe a counterfactual situation in which
these variables would be perfectly multicollinear.

Par t 2 (26 points)


1)

(6 points) Consider two white male frat-member non-sports Sophomores, one of whom is
18 years old and the other is 20 years old. Using regression (5):
a) (3 points) Compute the difference in the predicted values of binge30 for these two
students;
b) (3 points) Compute a 95% confidence interval for the difference in part (a).

2)

(5 points) Use regression (4) to test the null hypothesis that the relationship between age
and binge drinking is linear, against the alternative hypothesis that the relationship is
possibly a quadratic, at the 5% significance level. Is the null hypothesis rejected?

3)

(5 points) Suppose you hypothesized that female athletes are not prone to binge drinking,
even though male athletes might be. How would you modify regression (3) to test this
hypothesis? Be precise.

4)

(5 points) The p-value is missing in Table 2 for one of the F-tests based on regression (6).
Estimate this missing p-value and briefly explain how you did so.

5)

(5 points) In everyday language, what is the difference in the interpretation of the


coefficient on Greek in regression (3) and regression (6)?

Note to Par ts 3 and 4


Your answers should be based on the results in Table 2 and your knowledge of econometrics, not
on your beliefs about personal choice, equity, probity, etc.; these are questions about the
empirical results, not about your opinions concerning the Greek system, drinking, or such
matters.
Par t 3 (24 points)
Do you agree or disagree with the following statements? Briefly explain why. (8 points each)
1)

Binge drinking is a problem that primarily involves only a segment of the student
population.

2)

Sororities are just as bad as fraternities, at least from the perspective of binge drinking.

3)

Freshmen, who are learning how to cope with the new freedoms of college, have the
highest incidence of binge drinking; as students gain college experience, binge drinking
becomes much less of a problem.

Par t 4 (25 points)


1)

(8 points) Summarize the results in Table 2 about the effect on binge drinking of fraternity
and sorority membership. For the purpose of this question, take the results in the table at
face value, that is, do not consider threats to the validity of these results.

2)

(10 points) Provide two threats that, in your judgment, are the most important threats to the
internal validity of the results discussed in your response to Part 4/Question 1 (be specific
and explain your reasoning).

3)

(7 points) Consider the concerned college administrator of the introduction, who would like
to ban the Greek system and replace it with dorms or off-campus housing. All things
considered, do the results in Table 2 support this recommendation? Specifically, why or
why not?

Backgr ound for Par ts I and II: Political Cor r uption


Parts I and II examine the relationship between the general level of education of citizens and the
level of political corruption.
The data are cross-sectional for the 50 U.S. states on the following variables:
Var iables in the Cor r uption Data Set
Var iable
Corruption rate

LowEd share

Urban share
Foreign-born
share
ln(Pop)
Voting share
Manufacturing
share
HS1928
LnInc1940

Definition
Convictions in that state of federal, state, and local public
officials on corruption charges during the period 19902002, per 100,000 state residents
Share (fraction) of adults in 1990 with at most a high
school diploma (LowEd = .35 means 35% of adults have
at most a high school diploma)
Share (fraction) of adults in 1990 living in an urban area
Share (fraction) of adults in 1990 born outside the U.S.

Mean
3.9

Std. Dev.
2.1

.35

.07

.68
.02

.15
.02

Logarithm of 1990 state population


Share (fraction) of adults voting in the 1992 presidential
election
Share (fraction) of jobs that are in the manufacturing
sector in 1990
High school graduation rate in 1928
Logarithm of per capita state income in 1940

14.93
.58

1.01
.07

.17

.06

.30
6.23

.12
.79

Par t I: Cor r uption (A)


The questions in Part I refer to Table 1.

Table 1
The Deter minants of Cor r uption: OLS Regr essions Results
Dependent variable: Corruption Rate
Regressor
LowEd share

(1)
10.4
(5.2)

(2)
18.4
(8.7)
.4
(3.1)
21.9
(13.9)
-.61
(.38)
5.5
(6.0)

(3)
-9.7
(54.8)
Urban share
-.5
(3.2)
Foreign-born share
21.3
(14.3)
ln(Pop)
-.56
(.41)
Voting share
-11.1
(32.7)
47.7
LowEd shareVoting share
(94.8)
R2
.069
.173
.177
N
50
50
50
F-statistics testing the hypothesis of zero coefficients on groups of variables:
Urban share, Foreign share, ln(Pop),
.93
1.15
Voting share
(p = .455)
(p =.345)
2.25
LowEd share, LowEd shareVoting share
(p =.118)
0.52
Voting share, LowEd shareVoting share
(p =.600)
Urban share, Foreign share, ln(Pop),
0.93
(p
=.470)
Voting share, LowEd shareVoting share

Notes: Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors appear in parentheses under regression


coefficients, and p-values appear in parentheses under F-statistics. All regressions
include an estimated intercept, which is not reported. All regressions are estimated using
a cross-sectional data set consisting of 50 US states.

Questions for Par t I (25 points)

Answer these questions in blue book #1

1) (3 points) Using regression (2), construct a 95% confidence interval for the effect on the
corruption rate of an increase in LowEd share of .01 (that is, of a 1 percentage point increase
in the percent of the adult population with at most a high school degree).
2) Consider regression (3):
(a) (3 points) Test the hypothesis that the population coefficient on LowEd shareVoting
share is zero, against the alternative that it is nonzero.
(b) (3 points) Test the hypothesis that citizen participation, specifically the presidential
voting share, does not affect corruption, against the alternative that the voting share
affects corruption.
3) Do you agree or disagree with the following statements? Explain (3 points each).
(a) Because immigrants are less knowledgeable about the U.S. legal system, they are more
susceptible to governmental corruption. The regression results in Table 1 show that this
is true: more foreign-born citizens, more corruption.
(b) The R2 of regression (2) is low. Thus there are important determinants of corruption
omitted, and therefore the coefficient on LowEd share in regression (2) is biased because
of omitted variable bias.
(c) The regression results in Table 1 are flawed because they use heteroskedasticity-robust
standard errors: if the errors really are homoskedastic, then these standard errors will be
incorrect. The table should instead report standard errors that are correct even under
homoskedasticity.
4) Suppose that high levels of corruption result in low-quality public institutions, including lowquality schools, which in turn results in lower levels of education.
(a) (3 points) If so, what are the implications for the estimated effect on corruption of
education in Table 1? Briefly explain.
(b) Consider the following potential instrumental variables for LowEd share in regression
(3):
(i) Newspapers = average number of newspapers per capita in 1990
(ii) Alphabet = 1 if the state falls in the first half of the alphabet, = 0 otherwise (e.g. = 1
for Alabama, = 0 for Wyoming)
(2 points each) For each proposed instrument, is the variable arguably a valid instrument
variable? Briefly explain.

Par t II: Cor r uption (B)


The questions in Part II refer to Table 2.
Table 2
The Deter minants of Cor r uption: Two Stage Least Squar es Regr essions Results
Dependent variable: Corruption Rate
Endogenous regressor
LowEd share
Exogenous regressors
Urban share
Foreign-born share
ln(Pop)
Voting share

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

(6)

29.4
(11.7)

131.0
(114.4)

32.9
(12.8)

32.5
(10.2)

54.8
(36.4)

35.4
(11.4)

1.3
(2.8)
22.4
(14.4)
-.43
(.45)
14.4
(8.2)

18.4
(18.4)
69.3
(48.9)
-2.20
(1.97)
80.4
(73.3)

1.9
(2.9)
24.0
(14.7)
-.49
(.49)
16.6
(18.8)

HS1928

LnInc1940

2.7
(5.6)
12.6
(14.8)
.18
(.54)
32.1
(24.1)
-28.5
(10.7)
LnInc1940

19.0

0.7

19.7

2.6

50

50

HS1928,
LnInc1940
10.6
3.95
(p = .047)
50

-.4
(2.5)
7.0
(9.4)
.34
(.34)
17.4
(7.2)
-22.2
(6.3)
HS1928

50

50

-.1
(2.5)
7.7
(9.5)
-.32
(.35)
19.2
(7.8)
-23.0
(6.1)
HS1928,
LnInc1940
11.3
0.48
(p = .487)
50

Manufacturing share
Instrumental variables
First-stage F-statistic*
J-test of overidentifying
restrictions
N

Notes: Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors appear in parentheses under regression


coefficients, and p-values appear in parentheses under F-statistics. All regressions include an
estimated intercept, which is not reported. All regressions are estimated using a cross-sectional
data set consisting of 50 US states, where the variables are defined in Table 1.
*The first-stage F-statistic is the F-statistic testing the hypothesis that the coefficients on the
instruments in the first stage regression all equal zero.
Questions for Par t II (25 points)

Answer these questions in blue book #2

1) (15 points) From the regressions in Table 2, select one or more preferred regressions that
you believe provide the most reliable basis for inference about the effect of low education
levels on corruption. Carefully explain your reasoning.
2) (5 points) Based on your preferred regression(s), what conclusions do you draw about the
effect on corruption of the level of education? Explain.
3) (5 points) In your judgment, what are the most important threats to the internal validity of the
estimates in your preferred regression(s), upon which you based your answer to question 2?
4

Backgr ound for Par ts III and IV: The 2001 Tax Rebate
Because of an income tax cut enacted in May 2001, most U.S. taxpayers received a Federal tax
rebate check between July and September 2001. Taxpayers received the check if they paid taxes
in 2000 and if their income in 2000 was high enough. The maximum check size was $300 per
taxpayer. Typically a family of two adults and two children with 2000 income at least $25,000
would have received the maximum $600; if their income was half that, they did not get a check.
Because there were so many rebate checks, they were mailed over a ten-week period between
July and September 2001. The week in which a check was mailed was determined by the
second-to-last digit of the recipients social security number, a digit that is in effect randomly
assigned. Approximately 20% of the checks were mailed in July, approximately 40% were
mailed in August, and approximately 40% were mailed in September.
This study uses monthly, household-level panel data on consumption, personal characteristics,
and the tax rebate (size and date of receipt). The data set consists of N = 13,066 households and
T = 6 months. Of the 13,066 households, 7,709 received a rebate check, while 5,357 did not.
Variable definitions are:

Var iables in the Tax Rebate data set


Var iable
Cit
Rebateit
AnyChildrenit
HHAgeit
#Adultsit
LowIncomei

Definition
dollars of consumption spending (i.e. spending on food, gasoline,
insurance, rent, movies, etc.) by household i in month t
dollar value of rebate check(s) received by household i in month t
= 1 if household i in month t includes any children age 12 or less
= 0 otherwise
age (in years) of head of household i in month t
number of adults in household i in month t
= 1 if household income < $34,000 in June
= 0 otherwise

Par t III: Tax Rebates (A)


The questions in this part refer to Table 3.
The dependent variable in the regressions in Table 3 is the monthly change in the dollar value of
consumption for a given household, 'Cit = Cit Ci,t1.
Table 3
OLS Regr ession Results
Estimated using households who received a rebate check (all 6 months of data)
Dependent variable: 'Cit
(1)
.247
(.114)
-.172
(.097)
-.034
(.121)

Rebatet
Rebatet1
Rebatet2
LowIncome*

(2)
.130
(.185)
-.067
(.172)

-5.1
(13.8)

.624
RebatetLowIncome
(.266)

-.459
Rebatet1LowIncome
(.248)
Month fixed effects?
yes
yes
R2
.022
.024
N
7,709
7,709
F-statistics testing the hypothesis of zero coefficients on groups of variables:
Rebatet1, Rebatet2
3.36
(p = .032)

4.10
RebatetLowIncome, Rebatet1LowIncome
(p = .024)

Notes: Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors appear in parentheses below estimated


coefficients. All regressions include month fixed effects (values of these coefficients are
not reported). The regressions are estimated using panel data with T=6 months of data
(June through November) for the 7,709 households that received a rebate check.
*LowIncome does not vary over time (=1 for all t if household income < $34,000 in June,
= 0 for all t otherwise)

Questions for Par t III (29 points)

Answer these questions in blue book #3

1) Using regression (1):


(a) (2 points) What is the estimated effect of a $600 rebate on consumption in the month in
which the rebate is received?
(b) (2 points) Test the hypothesis that a rebate received in month t has no effect on the
change in consumption in the second month after which it is received, that is, on 'Ct+2.
2) Consider regression (1):
(a) (2 points) Would you expect the error term in this regression to be serially correlated?
Why or why not?
(b) Whatever your answer to 2(a), suppose that this error term is in fact serially correlated.
(i) (2 points) What are the implications of this serial correlation for bias in the estimated
causal effects? Explain.
(ii) (2 points) What are the implications of this serial correlation for the standard errors
reported in the table? Explain.
3) Using the results of regression (1):
(a) Draw the following graphs. Clearly label the axes and provide the numerical values of
the points (3 points each).
(i) The effect of a $1 rebate on the change of consumption, 'Ct, in the month the rebate
is received and the two subsequent months.
(ii) The effect of a $1 rebate on the level of consumption, Ct, in the month the rebate is
received and the two subsequent months.
(b) (2 points) Of a $1 rebate received in July, how much is estimated to remain unspent by
the end of September?
4) (3 points) During this period, the economy was emerging from a recession. A skeptic says:
The regression results show that, on average, consumption is increasing over this six-month
period, but this could just be a consequence of the general economic recovery. Therefore,
these regressions confuse the effect on consumption of the rebate with the broader effect of
the overall economic recovery. Do you agree or disagree? Why?
5) Using the results in regression (2), compare the estimated dynamic causal effects of the
rebate for low-income families vs. non-low income families.
(a) (3 points) Is there statistically significant evidence that the dynamic effects differ for
these two groups?
(b) (3 points) According to the estimated coefficients, which group (if any) has spent more of
the rebate check after two months, and (if so) by how much? Briefly, explain.
(c) (2 points) Do these results accord with economic reasoning, or do they pose a puzzle?
Briefly, explain.

Par t IV: The 2001 Tax Rebate (B)


The questions in Part IV refer to Tables 4 and 5.
Par t IV uses the subset of the data for J une and J uly for the following gr oups of
households:
Group
I.
2-adult households that received a full $600 rebate in July;
II. 2-adult households that received a full $600 rebate in August or September;
III. 2-adult households that never received a rebate (were ineligible for a rebate)
Table 4 summarizes average consumption for these groups, by month:
Table 4
Gr oup Aver age Consumption for J une and J uly

June

I (received in July)
C I , June

Gr oup
II (received later)
C II , June

July

C I , July

C II , July

III (never received)


C III , June
C III , July

For example, C I , June is the average consumption of households in Group I in June.


Table 5 summarizes a probit regression, estimated using data for July only for groups I and II.
Table 5
Pr obit Regr ession Results
Dependent variable: = 1 if check received in July, = 0 otherwise
Data used for estimation: groups I and II, July only
Intercept
AnyChildren
HHAge
F-statistic testing whether the coefficients
on AnyChildren and HHAge are zero

Probit Coefficient
-0.75
(0.04)
0.11
(0.12)
-.008
(.006)
1.42
(p = .241)

Notes: robust standard errors are given in parentheses below the


estimated probit coefficients.

Questions for Par t IV (21 points)

Answer these questions in blue book #4

For purposes of Part IV, the rebate effect is the effect of receiving a $600 tax rebate on
household consumption of eligible households, in the month in which the rebate is received,
holding all else constant.
1) Consider the following estimators of the rebate effect:
(a) C I , July C I , June
(b) C I , July C II , July
(c) C I , July C III , July
(d) ( C I , July C I , June ) ( C II , July C II , June )
(2 points each) For each estimator (a) (d), is this an unbiased estimator of the rebate
effect? Briefly explain.
2) (3 points) Provide a regression equation by which the estimator in 1(d) can be computed by
OLS regression estimated with household-level data for June and July.
3) Consider the probit regression in Table 5.
(a) (5 points) Using Table 5, compute the probability of receiving a check in July for an
eligible household with one child, aged 6 years, in which the head of household is 30
years old.
(b) (3 points) Do the results in Table 5 support, or cast doubt on, the governments claim that
the month in which checks were mailed is effectively random? Explain.

Backgr ound for Par ts I and II: Voting on Womens Issues


Parts I and II examine the relationship between the gender of a U.S. representatives children and
his/her voting record on womens issues. The data pertain to votes taken during the 105th
Congress (1997-1998; each Congress lasts two years). The observational unit is a U.S.
representative (House of Representatives only no senators). There are 435 representatives, but
the study focuses on the 371 who have at least one child (regressions with fewer than n = 371
reflect some missing opinion survey data). Among these 371 representatives with at least one
child, 89% are men and the mean age is 53.
Two voting measures are considered. The first (Teen contraceptive) is binary, whether the
representative voted to support a specific bill that would increase teenagers access to
contraceptives. The second (NOW) is a score ranging from 0 to 100 based on votes on
multiple bills related to womens issues, computed by the National Organization of Women
(NOW), measuring the agreement between the representatives votes and the voting
recommendations made by NOW (0 to 100, with 100 = perfect agreement).
The data set contains variables that measure the characteristics of the representatives district and
the results of a political opinion survey administered to voters in his/her district.
Var iables in the Voting Data Set
Var iable

Definition
Teen contraceptive = 1 if the representative voted in favor of a specific bill
increasing teen access to contraception, = 0 otherwise
NOW Composite NOW voting score:
0 = complete disagreement with NOWs positions
100 = complete agreement with NOWs positions
Fraction daughters fraction of the representatives children who are female (range
is 0 to 1)

District characteristics
Registered Democrat
District income
Fraction white
Fraction college grads
District opinions
Abortion should be legal
Women are equal to men
Anti-crime spending should
increase
Social service spending should
increase
Should be laws to protect
homosexuals from discrimination

proportion of voters registered as Democratic Party (0 to 1)


median income in district (thousands of dollars)
fraction of district voters who are white (0 to 1)
fraction of district voters who are college graduates (0 to 1)
fraction of survey respondents in district who agree (0 to 1)
fraction of survey respondents in district who agree (0 to 1)
fraction of survey respondents in district who agree (0 to 1)
fraction of survey respondents in district who agree (0 to 1)
fraction of survey respondents in district who agree (0 to 1)

The questions in Parts I and II refer to Table 1.


Table 1
The Effect of Having Daughter s on Repr esentatives Votes
Dependent variable

Estimation method
Regressors
Intercept
Fraction daughters
District characteristics
Registered Democrat

(1)
Teen
contraceptives?
Probit

(2)
Teen
contraceptives?
OLS

(3)
NOW

(4)
NOW

(5)
Fract.
daughters

OLS

OLS

OLS

-0.51**
(0.10)
0.36**
(0.12)

0.38**
(0.06)
0.13**
(0.05)

40.2**
(4.1)
6.18*
(2.67)

38.6**
(2.3)
6.01*
(2.86)

0.07
(0.29)

0.71**
(0.28)

0.23**
(0.09)

84.27**
(11.57)

82.1**
(15.8)
0.21
(0.20)
-8.6
(9.5)
-108.5
(77.7)

0.20
(0.26)
0.00
(0.00)
0.08
(0.19)
-1.72
(1.58)

41.0*
(20.6)
-20.6
(23.1)
30.2
(18.7)
-14.8
(16.8)
10.2
(13.9)
331

-0.32
(0.40)
0.25
(0.29)
0.82
(0.52)
-1.53**
(0.47)
-0.06
(0.36)
331

0.93
(0.46)
1.98
(0.081)

1.10
(0.36)
1.41
(0.220)

District income
Fraction white
Fraction college grads
District opinions
Abortion should be legal
Women are equal to men
Anti-crime spending should
increase
Social service spending should
increase
Should be laws to protect
homosexuals from discrimination
N
F-statistics testing that the
coefficients on variables in a
group are all zero
District characteristics

371

371

District opinions

371

Notes: Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors appear in parentheses under regression


coefficients, and p-values appear in parentheses under F-statistics. The regressions are estimated
using data on U.S. representatives during the 105th Congress (1997-1998).
Significant at the: **1%, *5% significance level.

Questions for Par t I (18 points). Please answer these questions in Blue Book I
1)

Interpret the coefficient on Fraction daughters in regression (2). (3 points)

2)

Consider a representative with 2 daughters and 1 son, from a district in which 55% of
voters are registered Democrats.
a) Using regression (1), compute the probability that this representative voted in favor of
the bill on teen access to contraception. (3 points)
b) Using regression (2), compute the probability that this representative voted in favor of
the bill on teen access to contraception. (3 points)

3)

Does the coefficient on Fraction daughters change substantially (in a real-world sense)
from regression (3) to regression (4)? What does this tell you about the additional variables
that were included in regression (4)? (3 points)

4)

A critic asserts that a shortfall of this study is that it focuses exclusively on daughters,
indicating gender bias by the author. The critic suggests adding one more regressor to
regression (4), specifically, Fraction sons, which is the fraction of males among the
representatives children. What would be learned from this regression? Be specific. (3
points)

5)

Another critic suggests that more conservative districts might elect representatives with
fewer daughters, so that Fraction daughters is endogenous. The author responds that
regression (5) provides evidence against this hypothesis, because Fraction daughters is
(with only one exception) unpredictable by the other regressors and thus is exogenous. Do
you agree or disagree with the authors response? Why? Be precise. (3 points)

Questions for Par t II (24 points). Please answer these questions in Blue Book II
1)

The following questions concern regression (4):


a) Provide a potential reason why the coefficient on district income in (4) is subject to
omitted variable bias. (2 points)
b) Comment on the following statement: Your answer to the previous question implies
that the conditional mean of the error term in (4) is nonzero, given the regressors in (4).
Therefore, the first least squares assumption is violated and the coefficient on Fraction
daughters in (4) does not have a causal interpretation. (3 points)

For the remaining questions, suppose (hypothetically) that the data set is extended to be panel
data for T = 3 Congresses, the 105th (1997-1998), 106th (1999-2000), and 107th (2001-2002)
Congresses. The observational unit would be a representative (his/her votes, children, and
district) in a given Congressional session. The data set would consist of all representatives who
were elected to Congress for all three sessions. Suppose n = 300, so there is a total of 900
observations (representatives are elected for two-year terms, and almost all who run for
reelection are reelected).
2)

Representatives in the 105th Congress who retire, are not reelected, or die would be in the
cross-sectional data set used in Table 1, but would not be in the panel data set. Would this
introduce sample selection bias into the panel data estimate of the effect of Fraction
daughters? (3 points)

Regardless of your answer to question (2), for the rest of these questions, ignore the possibility
of sample selection bias.
3)

To what extent would including representative fixed effects address the endogeneity
criticism raised in the first sentence of Part I, question 5? Explain. (3 points)

4)

Would it be appropriate to include time fixed effects, in addition to representative fixed


effects, in the panel data regression? Explain. (3 points)

5)

Consider a hypothetical panel data version of regression (4) in Table 1, in which both
representative fixed effects and time fixed effects are included. Call this hypothetical
regression (P4) (P for panel).
a) What is the problem that is solved by clustered or HAC standard errors, and how
do clustered standard errors solve that problem? (3 points)
b) In regression (P4), which would you recommend using: conventional
(heteroskedasticity-robust) standard errors or clustered standard errors? Explain, with
specific reference to regression (P4). (3 points)
c) Suppose that the author estimated regression (P4), using the standard errors you
recommended in part (b). Using your judgment, do you think that these standard errors
in hypothetical panel regression (P4) would be smaller, larger, or about the same as
those in the cross-section regression (4) in Table 1? Explain. (3 points)
4

Backgr ound to Par ts III and IV: Female Labor Supply


Harvard economist Claudia Goldin attributes much of the rise of professional women in the U.S.
labor force to their ability to engage in family planning after the introduction of the birth-control
pill. In developing countries early childbearing is associated with lower levels of education and
more dependency of women on their husbands earnings.
This question examines the effect of family size on female labor supply. The data set consists of
observations on n = 254,654 married women, aged 21 35, who have at least two children. The
data come from the 1980 U.S. Census of the Population (the data pertain to the full calendar year
of 1979).

Var iables in the Female Labor Supply Data Set


Var iable
Wifes weeks worked
Husbands weeks worked
Same sex
2 boys
2 girls
Kids>2
Boy first
Current age of mother
Age of mother at 1st birth
Black
Hispanic
Other race

Definition
No. of weeks wife worked for pay in 1979
No. of weeks husband worked for pay in 1979
= 1 if first two children have same sex, = 0 otherwise
= 1 if first two children are boys, = 0 otherwise
= 1 if first two children are girls, = 0 otherwise
= 1 if family has more than 2 children, = 0 otherwise
= 1 if first child is a boy, = 0 otherwise
age of mother in 1979
age of mother at birth of first child
= 1 if black
= 1 if Hispanic
= 1 if nonwhite/nonblack/nonHispanic

The questions in Parts III and IV refer to Table 2.


Table 2
Child Sex Composition, Family Size, and Labor Supply
Dependent variable

Estimation method
Instruments

(1)
Kids>2

(2)
Kids>2

OLS

OLS

(3)
Wifes
weeks
worked
OLS

(4)
Wifes
weeks
worked
TSLS
Same sex

(5)
Wifes
weeks
worked
TSLS
2 boys,
2 girls

(6)
Husband
s weeks
worked
TSLS
Same sex

-8.04**
(0.09)
-0.05
(0.08)
1.33**
(0.01)
-1.36**
(0.17)
10.83**
(0.19)
-0.04
(0.18)
2.82**
(0.20)
254,654

-5.40**
(1.21)
-0.02
(0.08)
1.25**
(0.04)
-1.24**
(0.05)
10.66**
(0.21)
-0.38
(0.23)
2.70**
(0.21)
254,654

-5.16**
(1.20)
-0.02
(0.08)
1.25**
(0.04)
-1.24**
(0.05)
10.64**
(0.21)
-0.41
(0.23)
2.69**
(0.21)
254,654

1.01
(0.63)
0.03
(0.08)
0.10*
(0.04)
-0.21**
(0.06)
-4.10**
(0.26)
-2.61**
(0.23)
2.02**
(0.18)
254,654

Regressors
Same sex

.0694**
(.0018)

2 boys

.0599**
(.0026)
.0789**
(.0026)

2 girls
Kids>2
Boy first
Current age of mother
Age of mother at 1st birth
Black
Hispanic
Other race
N
F-statistic on Same sex
F-statistic on 2 boys, 2
girls
J-statistic

-.0011
(.0019)
.0304**
(.0003)
-.0436**
(.0003)
.0680**
(.0042)
.1260**
(.0039)
.0480**
(.0044)
254,654
1413.0

-.0015
(.0026)
.0304**
(.0003)
-.0436**
(.0003)
.0680**
(.0042)
.1260**
(.0039)
.0480**
(.0044)
254,654
725.9

3.24

Notes: Regressions (4), (5), and (6) are estimated by two stage least squares (TSLS) regression,
in which the included endogenous variable is Kids>2. Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors
appear in parentheses under regression coefficients, and p-values appear in parentheses under Fstatistics. All regressions include an estimated intercept, which is not reported. Regressions (1)
(5) are estimated using data on married women for 1979, regression (6) is estimated using data
for the husbands of those married women.
Significant at the: **1%, *5% significance level.

Questions for Par t III (21 points). Please answer these questions in Blue Book III
1)

Give the best reason you can why the OLS estimator of the coefficient on Kids>2 in Table
2, column (3) might be biased. (3 points)

2)

Consider the hypothesis that, on average, U.S. parents want to have children of both
genders (that is, they prefer at least one girl and one boy to all girls or all boys). Does
Table 2 provide evidence in favor of this hypothesis, against this hypothesis, or neither?
Explain. (3 points)

3)

Consider the following potential instrumental variables for Kids>2 in regression (3):
a) Whether wife came from large family (binary) (3 points)
b) The teen pregnancy rate in the wifes city or town of residence (3 points)
For each proposed instrument, is the variable arguably a valid instrument variable? Briefly
explain.

4)

Based on a combination of your judgment and the empirical results in Table 2:


a) Is Same sex a valid instrument in regression (4)? (3 points)
b) Is the pair of variables, 2 boys and 2 girls, a valid set of instruments in regression (5)?
(3 points)

5)

The estimated coefficient on Kids>2 differs in regressions (3) and (4) (the OLS estimate is
more negative than the TSLS estimate). Provide a real-world explanation (an interpretation
of the results) that explains why the OLS estimate is more negative than the TSLS estimate.
(3 points)

Questions for Par t IV (17 points). Please answer these questions in Blue Book IV
1)

Consider a hypothetical regression (7),


Wifes weeks workedi = E0 + E1Kids>2 + ui

(7)

which would be estimated by TSLS, using Same sex as an instrument (so regression (7) is
regression (4) without the variables Boy first,, Other race). For this question, assume
that Same sex is a valid instrument in regression (4) and in addition that Same sex is
distributed independently of all the control variables in regression (4), so E(Boy first|Same
sex) = E(Boy first), , E(Other race|Same sex) = E(Other race).
a) Explain why Same sex would be a valid instrument in regression (7). (3 points)
b) Provide a reason why, despite the validity of Same sex as an instrument in regression
(7), you would still prefer regression (4). (3 points)
2)

Some women are more ambitious professionally than others. Suppose that the effect on
labor force participation of having a large family is not the same for every woman,
specifically, the more ambitious the woman, the smaller is the effect (the most ambitious
women will work whether or not they have a large family). How if at all would this
change your interpretation of the results in regressions (4) and (5)? Explain your reasoning.
(5 points)

Use Table 2 to comment on the following statements. For each statement, do you agree or
disagree with the statement, and explain why (be specific).
3)

Families with large numbers of children tend to be unusual in certain ways, in some cases
coming from certain religious/ethnic backgrounds (traditional Catholic families, Mormons,
etc.). So the analysis in regressions (4) and (5) is not providing a valid estimate of the
effect of family size on labor supply, it is just reflects this religious/ethnic effect. (3 points)

4)

Even though having large families reduces female labor force participation, this is only half
of the story because their husbands will work more to compensate for the loss of the wifes
earnings. (3 points)

Backgr ound to Par t V: The Ter m Spr ead and Output Gr owth
The U.S. Treasury issues bonds of different maturities. A 10-year bond is debt that is paid off
over 10 years. A one-year bond is debt that is paid off over one year. Usually, the rate of
interest on a 10-year bond exceeds the rate of interest on a one-year bond. If short-term interest
rates are unusually high, however, then the rate of interest on a one-year bond can exceed the
rate of interest on a 10-year bond. The difference between the rate of interest on a long-term
bond (here, the 10-year bond) and the rate of interest a short-term bond (here, the one-year bond)
is called the Term Spread. If the 10-year rate is 4.5 (percent) and the 1-year rate is 3.5 (percent),
then the spread is 1.0 (percentage points).
The Term Spread is often viewed as a measure of monetary policy. If monetary policy is
especially tight, then short term interest rates are high, relative to long term interest rates, and the
term spread is negative.
Over the past few months, the Term Spread in the U.S. has fallen, and just recently it became
negative for the first time since the onset of the recession in 2000.
The Term Spread data set contains quarterly time series data for the U.S. from the first quarter of
1960 (1960:I) through the third quarter of 2005 (2005:III). The data are plotted in Figure 1.

Var iables in Ter m Spr ead Data Set


Var iable
GDP growth

Term Spread

Definition
quarterly growth rate of GDP, expressed in percent at an annual
rate (computed using the logarithmic approximation, GDP growth
= 400ln(GDPt/GDPt1), where GDPt is the real Gross Domestic
Product of the U.S. in quarter t. (Quarterly GDP is the total value
of final goods and services produced in the United States in that
quarter.)
the interest rate on a 10-year U.S. Treasury bill, minus the interest
rate on a 1-year U.S. Treasury bill.

20

10

-10
1960q1

1972q3

1985q1
time

1997q3

2010q1

Quarterly GDP growth at an annual rate

-2

-4
1960q1

1972q3

1985q1
time

1997q3

2010q1

Term Spread: 10-year minus 1-year

Figure 1. Time series plots of quarterly GDP growth and Term Spread, 1960:I 2005:III

10

The questions in Part V refer to Table 3.


Table 3
GDP Gr owth and the Ter m Spr ead
Dependent variable: GDP growtht
Sample period

(1)
1960:I
2005:III

(2)
1960:I
2005:III

(3)
1960:I
2005:III

(4)
1960:I
1984:IV

(5)
1985:I
2005:III

2.42**
(0.38)
0.27**
(0.08)

2.04**
(0.52)
0.24**
(0.08)
0.18
(0.14)
-0.06
(0.08)
0.01
(0.10)

1.85**
(0.45)
0.26**
(0.07)

2.05**
(0.56)
0.23*
(0.10)

2.07**
(0.57)
0.25*
(0.12)

0.67**
(0.25)
5.37
(0.03)
183
3.1

1.56**
(0.44)
2.59
(0.26)
100
3.8

0.18
(0.20)
2.88
(0.24)
83
1.93

Regressors
Intercept
GDP growtht1
GDP growtht2
GDP growtht3
GDP growtht4
Term Spreadt1
Quandt Likelihood Ratio (QLR)
statistic (p-value in parentheses)
T
SER
F-statistic testing zero coefficients
on GDP growtht2,. GDP growtht3,
and GDP growtht4 (p-value in
parentheses)

1.18
(0.41)
183
3.3

1.71
(0.32)
183
3.2
1.27
(0.29)

Notes: Estimation is by OLS, with heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors in parentheses. The


regressions are estimated over the sample period given in the first row. The QLR statistic is for
all the regressors in the regression, including the intercept. Heteroskedasticity-robust standard
errors are included in parentheses.
Significant at the: **1%, *5%, +10% significance level.

11

Questions for Par t V (20 points). Please answer these questions in Blue Book V
1)

The value of GDP growth in 2005:III was 4.1 (that is, in the third quarter of 2005, GDP
grew by 4.1% at an annual rate).
a) Use regression (1) in Table 3 to compute a forecast of GDP growth for 2005:IV. (3
points)
b) Suppose that the errors in regression (1) are normally distributed. Compute a 95%
prediction interval (forecast interval) for GDP growth in 2005:IV. (3 points)
c) Suppose that forecast errors come in clusters, for example, some years have more
volatile GDP growth than others, so that GDP growth is more difficult to predict in
some years than in others. Suggest a modification of regression (1) in Table 3 that
would produce more reliable forecast intervals if there is this forecast error volatility
clustering. (2 points)

2)

Table 3 reports heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors. Should it report HAC standard


errors instead? Explain. (2 points)

3)

In Business Week Online (January 9, 2006), David Wyss, chief economist for Standard and
Poors wrote about how the recent decline of Term Spread has created worries about a
slowdown in U.S. economic growth. Based on the results in Table 3, do you think that
these worries are justified? Fully explain your reasoning. (5 points)

4)

Suppose the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank is considering setting Term Spread to 1.0, that is,
increasing Term Spread from its current value of approximately zero by 1.0 percentage
point. (Suppose that, because long rates are more sluggish than short rates, the Fed can do
this by lowing short-term interest rates until Term Spread equals 1.0.)
a) Use regression (5) to estimate the effect of this easing. (1 points)
b) In your judgment, do you think that your answer in (a) provides a good estimate of the
effect of this proposed policy intervention by the Fed? Why or why not? (4 points)

12

Backgr ound for Par ts I and II: Natur e vs. Nur tur e
What is the relative importance of nature (genes) vs. nurture (social and family
environment) in determining economic outcomes? This part examines this question using data
from a large adoption agency that placed Korean children in American families between 1964
and 1985.
At this agency, the parents must file an application, pass a criminal background check, and
attend adoption classes; if all goes well, they are then deemed eligible. Children are then
matched with eligible parents on a first-come, first-serve basis.
The data set contains data on the parents and their children, both adopted and non-adopted
(natural), at the time of adoption and also at the end of the study when they are adults. Some
households have multiple adoptees; for the purpose of this analysis, assume that the Korean
adoptees in the same household are not related by blood. The analysis is restricted to adoptees
who are at least 25 years of age at the end of the study.
Var iables in the Adoption Data Set
Variable
Definition
Childs characteristics upon adoption
Adopted = 1 if adoptee, = 0 if non-adopted
Weight at adoption Weight of child upon adoption (pounds)
Height at adoption Height of child upon adoption (inches)
Childs characteristics at end of study (as an adult)
Childs education Years of education of adult child
College grad = 1 if adult child graduates from a 4-year college, = 0 otherwise
Childs income Income of adult child
Childs BMI BMI of adult child. The BMI is the Body Mass Index, which is weight
(in kilograms) divided by the square of height (in meters), so units are
kg/m2.
Child drinks = 1 if adult child drinks alcohol, = 0 otherwise
Parent characteristics
Mothers education
Fathers education
Log Parent's Income
Mother's BMI
Fathers BMI
Mother drinks
Father drinks
Year binary variables

Years of education of mother


Years of education of father
natural logarithm of parents income in dollars
BMI of mother (kg/m2)
BMI of father (kg/m2)
= 1 if mother drinks alcohol, = 0 otherwise
= 1 if father drinks alcohol, = 0 otherwise
Binary variables indicating the year of adoption (the first year of
program is the omitted or base year)

Table 1. Regr ession of adoptee height and weight at adoption on pr e-adoption par ental
char acter istics
(1)
Weight at
adoption
(pounds)

(2)
Height at
adoption
(inches)

(3)
Weight at
adoption
(pounds)

(4)
Height at
adoption
(inches)

-0.008
(0.097)

-0.067
(0.095)

0.017
(0.088)

-0.038
(0.078)

Father's Education

-0.028
(0.077)

0.046
(0.077)

-0.047
(0.073)

0.005
(0.069)

Log Parent's Income

0.508**
(0.197)

0.707**
(0.201)

-0.119
(0.277)

0.034
(0.244)

Mother's BMI

-0.019
(0.039)

-0.023
(0.039)

-0.051
(0.037)

-0.065
(0.034)

Father's BMI

0.000
(0.046)

0.022
(0.046)

-0.029
(0.047)

-0.033
(0.048)

Mother Drinks

-0.125
(0.463)

-0.187
(0.454)

0.017
(0.456)

0.050
(0.416)

Father Drinks

0.241
(0.479)

-0.271
(0.471)

0.288
(0.473)

-0.266
(0.426)

No

No

Yes

Yes

Observations

989

1038

989

1038

Adjusted R-squared

0.02

0.03

0.14

0.28

2.87
(0.008)

2.73
(0.009)

0.66
(0.709)

0.84
(0.553)

Dependent variable

Regressors:
Mother's Education

Year binary variables?

F-statistic testing:
coefficients parental
variables =0 (p-value)

Notes: All regressions are estimated by OLS. Clustered standard errors are given in parentheses,
where the clustering occurs at the level of the family. All regressions include an intercept, which
is not reported.
* significant at 5%; ** significant at 1%.

Table 2. Regr ession of adoptee outcome var iables on pr e-adoption par ental char acter istics
(1)
Child's
Years of
Education

(2)
Child's
Years of
Education

(3)
College
Grad

(4)
Log
Child's
Income

(5)
Child's
BMI

(6)
Child
Drinks

Mother's Education

0.097**
(0.027)

0.084**
(0.031)

0.021*
(0.008)

0.016
(0.013)

-0.081
(0.061)

0.010
(0.009)

Father's Education

-0.001
(0.032)

-0.041
(0.055)

-0.004
(0.007)

-0.004
(0.011)

-0.037
(0.052)

0.010
(0.007)

Log parent's income

-0.018
(0.113)

-0.005
(0.032)

0.011
(0.027)

0.024
(0.040)

-0.412
(0.219)

0.015
(0.028)

Mother's BMI

-0.088**
(0.024)

0.180
(0.183)

-0.017**
(0.004)

-0.004
(0.006)

0.006
(0.028)

-0.001
(0.004)

Father's BMI

0.007
(0.020)

-0.008
(0.112)

-0.000
(0.004)

-0.000
(0.007)

-0.004
(0.038)

0.004
(0.004)

Dependent variable

Regressors:

(Mother's BMI)2

-0.091
(0.118)

(Father's BMI)2

-0.081
(0.202)

(Mother's BMI) x
(Fathers BMI)

0.274
(0.206)

Mother Drinks

-0.039
(0.205)

-0.715**
(0.175)

-0.043
(0.046)

-0.007
(0.066)

-0.345
(0.392)

0.135**
(0.045)

Father Drinks

0.263
(0.212)

0.000
(0.002)

0.050
(0.048)

0.030
(0.070)

0.580
(0.396)

0.061
(0.046)

Child is Male

-0.723**
(0.177)

-0.004
(0.003)

-0.159**
(0.041)

-0.259**
(0.059)

1.927**
(0.301)

0.068
(0.040)

Constant

16.902**
(1.063)

0.002
(0.004)

0.766**
(0.264)

3.758**
(0.466)

31.183**
(2.350)

0.121
(0.315)

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

897
0.01

874
0.06

878
0.04

893
0.04

Year binary variables?


F-statistic testing: (Mother's BMI)2,
(Fathers BMI)2, (Mothers BMI) x
(Fathers BMI) = 0 (p-value)
Observations
Adjusted R-squared

0.57
(0.634)

897
0.03

897
0.03

Notes: All regressions are estimated by OLS. Clustered standard errors are given in parentheses,
where the clustering occurs at the level of the family. * significant at 5%; ** significant at 1%.
3

Table 3. Pr obit r egr essions of outcome var iables on pr e-adoption par ental char acter istics
for adoptee and non-adoptee childr en
(1)
College Grad

(2)
Child Drinks

(3)
College Grad

(4)
Child Drinks

Adoptees

Adoptees

Non-adoptees

Non-adoptees

0.057**
(0.019)

0.013
(0.021)

0.097**
(0.025)

0.032
(0.025)

Father's Education

-0.010
(0.017)

0.022
(0.018)

0.105**
(0.020)

0.021
(0.022)

Log Parent's Income

0.008
(0.064)

0.079
(0.066)

0.108
(0.076)

-0.067
(0.077)

Mother's BMI

-0.086**
(0.019)

0.000
(0.009)

-0.108**
(0.022)

0.000
(0.013)

Father's BMI

-0.003
(0.010)

0.000
(0.010)

-0.030*
(0.012)

0.010
(0.015)

Mother Drinks

-0.054
(0.109)

0.374**
(0.106)

0.039
(0.128)

0.489**
(0.131)

Father Drinks

0.042
(0.112)

0.211
(0.110)

0.134
(0.132)

0.611**
(0.132)

Child is Male

-0.397**
(0.090)

0.203*
(0.097)

-0.063
(0.098)

0.355**
(0.100)

Constant

0.142
(0.566)

-1.300*
(0.570)

-1.680**
(0.607)

-1.396*
(0.669)

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

1088

1083

943

933

Dependent variable
Data are for:
Regressors:
Mother's Education

Year binary variables?


Observations

Notes: All regressions are probit. Clustered standard errors are given in parentheses, where the
clustering occurs at the level of the family.
* significant at 5%; ** significant at 1%

Par t I (24 points)


Please answer these questions in Blue Book I
The questions in Part I refer to the results in Tables 1 and 2.
1) Using regression (1) in Table 2:
a) (3 points) Compute the estimated effect on the childs years of education of an increase
of four years in the mothers education.
b) (2 points) Compute a 95% confidence interval for your estimated effect in (a).
2) Consider the relationship between the childs years of education and parental BMI, holding
constant the regressors in Table 2, column (1) other than parental BMI.
a) (2 points) Suggest a reason why this effect might be nonlinear.
b) (2 points) Can you reject the null hypothesis that effect on the childs years of education
of parental BMI is linear? Explain.
3) Consider the regressions in Table 1.
a) (2 points) Explain why these regressions can be used to examine the proposition that the
assignment process of adoptees to families was in effect random.
b) (2 points) Using regressions (1) and (2), can you reject the hypothesis of random
assignment? Explain.
c) (2 points) Using regressions (3) and (4), can you reject the hypothesis of random
assignment? Explain.
d) (3 points) Explain what your answers to (b) and (c) imply about the program. Explain, in
real-world, concrete terms, how you might reconcile any discrepancy between your
answers to (b) and (c).
4) The standard errors reported in Tables 1 and 2 are clustered standard errors, clustered at
the level of the household.
a) (3 points) Explain specifically what this means, that is, what are clustered standard errors,
clustered at the level of the household? Be precise.
b) (3 points) Provide a reason why the clustered standard errors could be larger than the
conventional heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors for the regressions in Table 2.

Par t II (22 points)


Please answer these questions in Blue Book II
The questions in Part II refer to the results in Tables 2 and 3.
1) Consider a female adoptee whose adoptive mother has 14 years of education, whose father
has 16 years of education, whose parents income is $50,000, mothers BMI is 23, fathers
BMI is 24, the mother does not drink, and the father does not drink. Also suppose that the
child was adopted in the initial program year (so all binary year variables equal zero).
a) (3 points) Using regression (2) in Table 3, compute predicted probability that the adoptee
grows up to be a drinker.
b) (2 points) What is the difference in the predicted probabilities of drinking for the adoptee
in (a), compared with an adoptee whose parents have the same characteristics as those in
(a) except that the mother drinks?
c) (2 points) Now use the linear probability model from Table 2 to estimate the change in
predicted probabilities for the comparison in 1(b) (that is, a nondrinking vs. a drinking
mother, with the values of the other regressors given at the beginning of this question).
2) Using the results in Tables 2 and 3, do you agree or disagree with the following statements?
Explain.
a) (5 points) Many countries impose restrictions on foreign adopting parents, including
limits on parental BMI and parents education. The results in Tables 2 and 3 support
these policies in the sense that Tables 2 and 3 show that high parental BMI and low
parental education both are associated with worse outcomes for adoptees.
b) (5 points) The results in Tables 2 and 3 show that dieting by overweight mothers has
positive benefits for children. Specifically, consider a mother who decreases her BMI by
10 (for an obese woman, this corresponds to a weight drop of approximately 25%). On
average, holding other family characteristics constant, we would expect to see this weight
loss lead to an economically substantial increase in the childs years of education and in
the childs probability of graduating from college.
c) (5 points) The results in Table 3 shed light on the nature-nurture debate. These tables
show that paternal characteristics (such as drinking and being overweight) are transmitted
primarily through a genetic path, whereas maternal characteristics seem to be transmitted
primarily through a non-genetic (that is, environmental) path.

Backgr ound for Par t III: Fast-Food TV Adver tising and Childhood Obesity
Childhood obesity is a health problem of significant concern. In the 1960s, approximately 4
percent of American children ages 6 to 11 were overweight; by 1999, 13 percent of American
children were overweight. Measured in terms of BMI, the average BMI for children rose from
16.63 in the 1960s to 17.37 in 1999, an increase of almost 5%; this is a large increase in
historical and medical terms. [The BMI is the body mass index, which is weight (in kilograms)
divided by the square of height (in meters), so the units of the BMI are kg/m2.]
A shift to a high-fat, high-calorie childhood diet the sort of food found at fast-food restaurants
is one possible reason for the increase in childhood BMI. This section considers whether
exposure to fast-food advertising on TV plays a role in this increase.
The data set is a cross-sectional data set on children aged 6-11 in the U.S. in 1997. It contains
data on childrens characteristics, family characteristics, TV viewing by the child, and
characteristics of the childs county.

Var iables in the Childhood BMI Data Set


Var iable

Definition

Child characteristics

Childs BMI (kilograms/meter2)


Number of hours per week of fast-food TV ads seen by the
child
Age Childs age (years)
Other individual variables Childs race and sex, family income, mothers BMI, and
mother employed/not employed
BMI
TV Exposure

County characteristics
Price of TV advertising

Average price of TV advertising in the childs county in 1997


($/second)
Number of households with TV Number of households in the childs county with a TV
(hundreds of thousands)
Temperature Average annual temperature in childs county (degrees
Fahrenheit)
Other county variables Number of fast-food restaurants per capita, number of fullservice restaurants per capita, and price indexes for fast-food
restaurant meals, full-service restaurant meals, and at-home
restaurant meals

Table 4. Childr ens BMI and Fast-Food TV Adver tising


Dependent variable

(1)
BMI

(2)
TV exposure

(3)
BMI

Estimation method

OLS

OLS

Two Stage
Least Squaresa

TV exposure

.315**
(.111)

--

.336*
(.150)

Age

.429**
(.028)

.021*
(.010)

.388**
(.048)

Price of TV advertising

--

-.148**
(.013)

--

Number of households with TV

--

.100+
(.064)

--

Temperature

--

4.711
(5.50)

--

Other individual variables?

Yes

Yes

Yes

Other county variables?

Yes

Yes

Yes

F-statistic testing: coefficients on


Price of TV advertising, no.
households with TV, and
Temperature = 0

--

41.92

--

J-statistic

--

--

.308

6,818

6,818

6,818

Regressors:

Number of observations

Notes: Heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors appear in parentheses under regression


coefficients, and p-values appear in parentheses under F-statistics. All regressions contain the
other individual variables (childs race, male/female, family income, mothers BMI, mother
employed/not employed) and the other county variables (number of fast-food restaurants per
capita, number of full-service restaurants per capita, price indexes for fast-food restaurant meals,
full-service restaurant meals, and at-home restaurant meals ).
a

Instruments for the TSLS regression are the Price of TV Advertising, Number of households
with TV, and Temperature.
Significant at the: **1%, *5%, +10% significance level.

Questions for Par t III (34 points)


Please answer these questions in Blue Book III
The questions in Part III refer to Table 4.
1) (3 points) Suggest a reason why TV exposure might be endogenous in regression (1).
2) Regression (3) uses three variables as instrumental variables for TV exposure. For each
instrument, explain whether, in your judgment, the instrument plausibly is exogenous:
a) (2 points) the Price of TV advertising in the county;
b) (2 points) the Number of households with TV in the county;
c) (2 points) the average annual county Temperature.
3) Consider regression (3).
a) (3 points) Suppose the instruments in regression (3) are weak. If so, what would the
consequence be for interpreting the results in column (3), specifically the coefficient on
TV exposure and its standard error?
b) (3 points) Based on the results in Table 2 (TYPO: this should be Table 4), are the
instruments weak, are they strong, or do you need more information before you can
decide? Explain.
4) Consider the J-statistic in column (3).
a) (3 points) Suppose you were to reject the null hypothesis using this J-statistic. What
would you conclude?
b) (3 points) Using the J-statistic actually reported in column (3), do you reject the null
hypothesis at the 5% significance level? Explain how you reached this conclusion (be
precise).
5) (3 points) A researcher suggests using as instruments a full set of county binary variables
(county dummy variables). What would be the effect of adding a full set of county dummy
variables to regression (2)?
6) (5 points) Another researcher suggests replacing the instruments in regression (3) with a new
instrumental variable, ProSports, that equals one if at least one local professional sports team
was in the playoffs during the study period, and equals zero otherwise. For the purposes of
this question, suppose that ProSports is a valid instrument. Describe, in concrete and
everyday terms, a reason why the local average treatment effect obtained using ProSports
would differ from the average treatment effect. In your example, is the local average
treatment effect greater than or less than the average treatment effect?
7) (5 points) Do you agree or disagree with the following statement? Explain fully. (The
sample average of TV Exposure is approximately 0.5 hours.)
The results in Table 1 (TYPO: this should be Table 4) indicate that a ban on TV fastfood advertisements would reduce the BMI among children by an amount that is
statistically significant and meaningful in a real-world sense.
9

Backgr ound to Par t IV: Baseball


U.S. Major League Baseball (MLB) has experienced a number of changes that could change the
competitive balance across teams. On occasion, the league has expanded by creating new teams.
In 1976, U.S. Major League Baseball (MLB) introduced free agency, which gives the players
the right to sell their services to the highest bidder upon the expiration of their contract or under
certain other conditions; previously, players could switch teams only if they were traded or
released by their team. What have been the effects of league expansion and free agency on the
competitive balance among teams?
The measure of competitiveness used here is the standard deviation of the end-of-season winning
percentages of MLB teams in year t. A teams winning percent is the percent of games won that
year, for example, 55%. Thus, if the standard deviation of the winning percentage is large in a
given year, there is a large spread in the won/loss record among teams, indicating a noncompetitive year. The data are annual time series data from 1950 to 2001. The variables SDWP
and FreeAgents are plotted in Figure 1.
Var iables in the Baseball Data Set: Annual Time Ser ies Data, 1950 - 2001
Var iable

Definition
Standard deviation of the end-of-season winning percentages of MLB
teams in year t (units are percentage points)
Number of players who declared free agency in year t, divided by 10 (so
units ar e tens of player s)
= 1 if MLB expanded the number of teams in year t, = 0 otherwise

SDWPt
FreeAgentst
Expansion Yeart

15

SDWP
10

FreeAgents
0
1940

1960

1980

2000

YEAR

Figure 1. SDWP (solid line) and the first lag of FreeAgents (circles) plotted against time

10

Table 5. Time Ser ies Models of the Baseball Competitiveness


Dependent variable: the Standard Deviation of Winning Percentages (SDWPt)
(1)

(2)

(3)

-0.109
(0.040)
[0.046]

-0.106
(0.037)
[0.047]

-0.110
(0.038)
[0.046]

1.536
(0.569)
[0.363]

1.544
(0.579)
[0.386]

Regressors:
FreeAgentst-1

Expansion Yeart

Expansion Yeart-1

-0.583
(0.577)
[0.289]

Expansion Yeart-2

-0.293
(0.579)
[0.368]

Constant

Observations
R2

7.908
(0.252)
[0.408]

7.714
(0.247)
[0.458]

7.624
(0.264)
[0.533]

50

50

50

0.14

0.25

0.27

F-statistics testing coefficients on Expansion Yeart-1, Expansion Yeart-2 = 0:


Heteroskedasticity-robust F--statistic (p-value)
Newey-West F-statistic
(p-value)

--

--

0.67
(0.516)
2.09
(0.136)

Notes: All regressions are OLS and are estimated using data from 1952 2001, with earlier
observations for initial values of lagged regressors. Under the estimated coefficients are
heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors in parentheses ( ) and Newey-West standard errors with
four lags in square brackets [ ].

11

Questions for Par t IV (20 points)


Please answer these questions in Blue Book III
The questions in Part IV refer to Table 5.
1) In an expansion year, new teams are added to the league.
a) (3 points) What is the immediate, or impact, effect of an expansion on competitiveness?
(Provide a numerical estimate and interpret.)
b) (3 points) What is the cumulative dynamic effect of the expansion on competitiveness,
two years after the expansion? (Provide a numerical estimate and interpret.)
c) (3 points) Compute the standard error for the cumulative dynamic effect in (b). If you do
not have enough information to do so, explain how you would compute this standard
error and what additional information you would need.
2) (3 points) Table 5 reports two sets of standard errors, heteroskedasticity-robust standard
errors and Newey-West standard errors. Which should be used here? Explain.
3) (3 points) A critic of this analysis asserts that the relationship in regression (3) might be
unstable and suggests computing the QLR statistic (with trimming of 15% on each end of the
sample, as is conventional). Is this a good recommendation for the purpose of assessing the
stability of regression (3)? Explain why or why not.
4) (5 points) Baseball owners assert that free agency reduces competitiveness across baseball
teams because rich teams can outbid poor teams, increasing talent disparities across teams.
Based on the results in Table 5, do you agree, disagree, or can you not reach a conclusion?
Explain.

12

You might also like