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Wooldrige: Introductory Econometrics, Chapter17, C15 -------------------- Use the data set in ALCOHOL.
Hi, I need help with sub question vii and viii, thanks.
Wooldrige: Introductory Econometrics, Chapter17, C15
--------------------
Use the data set in ALCOHOL.RAW, obtained from Terza (2002), to answer this question.
The data, on 9,822 men, includes labor market information,
whether the man
abuses alcohol, and demographic and background variables. In this question you will
study the effects of alcohol abuse on employ, which is a binary variable equal to one if
the man has a job. If employ 5 0 the man is either unemployed or not in the workforce.
(i) What fraction of the sample is employed at the time of the interview? What
fraction
of the sample has abused alcohol?
(ii) Run the simple regression of employ on abuse and report the results in the
usual form, obtaining the heteroskedasticity-robust standard errors. Interpret
the estimated
equation. Is the relationship as you expected? Is it statistically
significant?
(iii) Run a probit of employ on abuse. Do you get the same sign and statistical
significance
as in part (ii)? How does the average partial effect for the probit
compare
with that for the linear probability model?
(iv) Obtain the fitted values for the LPM estimated in part (ii) and report what they are
when abuse 5 0 and when abuse 5 1. How do these compare to the probit fitted
values, and why?
(v) To the LPM in part (ii) add the variables age, agesq, educ, educsq, married,
famsize,
white, northeast, midwest, south, centcity, outercity, qrt1, qrt2, and qrt3.
What happens to the coefficient on abuse and its statistical significance?
(vi) Estimate a probit model using the variables in part (v). Find the APE of abuse and
its t statistic. Is the estimated effect now identical to that for the linear model? Is it
"close"?
(vii) Variables indicating the overall health of each man are also included in the data
set. Is it obvious that such variables should be included as controls? Explain.
(viii) Why might abuse be properly thought of as endogenous in the employ equation?
Do you think the variables mothalc and fathalc, indicating whether a man's
mother or father were alcoholics, are sensible instrumental variables for abuse?
(ix) Estimate the LPM underlying part (v) by 2SLS, where mothalc and fathalc act as
IVs for abuse. Is the difference between the 2SLS and OLS coefficients practically
large?
(x) Use the test described in Section 15.5 to test whether abuse is endogenous in the
LPM.