Instrumental-Variable Estimation of Count Data Models: Applications to Models of Cigarette Smoking Behavior
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in The Review of Economics and Statistics
- Vol. 79 (4) , 586-593
- https://doi.org/10.1162/003465397557169
Abstract
As with most analyses involving microdata, applications of count data models must somehow account for unobserved heterogeneity. The count model literature has generally assumed that unobservables and observed covariates are statistically independent. Yet for many applications this independence assumption is clearly tenuous. When the unobservables are omitted variables correlated with included regressors, standard estimation methods will generally be inconsistent. Though alternative consistent estimators may exist in special circumstances, it is suggested here that a nonlinear instrumental-variable strategy offers a reasonably general solution to such estimation problems. This approach is applied in two examples that focus on cigarette smoking behavior. © 1997 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyKeywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Air pollution, cigarette smoking, and the production of respiratory healthJournal of Health Economics, 1990
- A simple test for exogeneity in probit, logit, and poisson regression modelsEconomics Letters, 1990
- Econometric models based on count data. Comparisons and applications of some estimators and testsJournal of Applied Econometrics, 1986
- Econometric Models for Count Data with an Application to the Patents-R & D RelationshipEconometrica, 1984
- Pseudo Maximum Likelihood Methods: Applications to Poisson ModelsEconometrica, 1984
- Estimating a Household Production Function: Heterogeneity, the Demand for Health Inputs, and Their Effects on Birth WeightJournal of Political Economy, 1983
- Large Sample Properties of Generalized Method of Moments EstimatorsEconometrica, 1982
- Analysis of Covariance with Qualitative DataThe Review of Economic Studies, 1980
- The nonlinear two-stage least-squares estimatorJournal of Econometrics, 1974
- Multiple Regression Analysis of a Poisson ProcessJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1961