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Testing for the extent of instability in nearly unstable processes

Abstract

This paper deals with unit root issues in time series analysis. It has been known for a long time that unit root tests may be flawed when a series although stationary has a root close to unity. That motivated recent papers dedicated to autoregressive processes where the bridge between stability and instability is expressed by means of time-varying coefficients. The process we consider has a companion matrix AnA_{n} with spectral radius ρ(An)<1\rho(A_{n}) < 1 satisfying ρ(An)1\rho(A_{n}) \rightarrow 1, a situation described as `nearly-unstable'. The question we investigate is: given an observed path supposed to come from a nearly-unstable process, is it possible to test for the `extent of instability', i.e. to test how close we are to the unit root? In this regard, we develop a strategy to evaluate α\alpha and to test for H0:α=α0"\mathcal{H}_0 : ``\alpha = \alpha_0" against H1:α>α0"\mathcal{H}_1 : ``\alpha > \alpha_0" when ρ(An)\rho(A_{n}) lies in an inner O(nα)O(n^{-\alpha})-neighborhood of the unity, for some 0<α<10 < \alpha < 1. Empirical evidence is given about the advantages of the flexibility induced by such a procedure compared to the common unit root tests. We also build a symmetric procedure for the usually left out situation where the dominant root lies around 1-1.

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