A VAR process can be affected by other observable variables that are determined outside the system of interest. Such variables are called exogenous (independent) variables. Exogenous variables can be stochastic or nonstochastic. The process can also be affected by the lags of exogenous variables. A model used to describe this process is called a VARX(p,s) model.
The VARX(p,s) model is written as
where is an r-dimensional time series vector and is a matrix.
For example, a VARX(1,0) model is
where and .
The following statements fit the VARX(1,0) model to the given data:
data grunfeld; input year y1 y2 y3 x1 x2 x3; label y1='Gross Investment GE' y2='Capital Stock Lagged GE' y3='Value of Outstanding Shares GE Lagged' x1='Gross Investment W' x2='Capital Stock Lagged W' x3='Value of Outstanding Shares Lagged W'; datalines; 1935 33.1 1170.6 97.8 12.93 191.5 1.8 1936 45.0 2015.8 104.4 25.90 516.0 .8 1937 77.2 2803.3 118.0 35.05 729.0 7.4 1938 44.6 2039.7 156.2 22.89 560.4 18.1 ... more lines ...
/*--- Vector Autoregressive Process with Exogenous Variables ---*/ proc varmax data=grunfeld; model y1-y3 = x1 x2 / p=1 lagmax=5 printform=univariate print=(impulsx=(all) estimates); run;
The VARMAX procedure output is shown in Figure 42.19 through Figure 42.21.
Figure 42.19 shows the descriptive statistics for the dependent (endogenous) and independent (exogenous) variables with labels.
Figure 42.19: Descriptive Statistics for the VARX(1, 0) Model
Number of Observations | 20 |
---|---|
Number of Pairwise Missing | 0 |
Simple Summary Statistics | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Variable | Type | N | Mean | Standard Deviation |
Min | Max | Label |
y1 | Dependent | 20 | 102.29000 | 48.58450 | 33.10000 | 189.60000 | Gross Investment GE |
y2 | Dependent | 20 | 1941.32500 | 413.84329 | 1170.60000 | 2803.30000 | Capital Stock Lagged GE |
y3 | Dependent | 20 | 400.16000 | 250.61885 | 97.80000 | 888.90000 | Value of Outstanding Shares GE Lagged |
x1 | Independent | 20 | 42.89150 | 19.11019 | 12.93000 | 90.08000 | Gross Investment W |
x2 | Independent | 20 | 670.91000 | 222.39193 | 191.50000 | 1193.50000 | Capital Stock Lagged W |
Figure 42.20 shows the parameter estimates for the constant, the lag zero coefficients of exogenous variables, and the lag one AR coefficients. From the schematic representation of parameter estimates, the significance of the parameter estimates can be easily verified. The symbol "C" means the constant and "XL0" means the lag zero coefficients of exogenous variables.
Figure 42.20: Parameter Estimates for the VARX(1, 0) Model
Type of Model | VARX(1,0) |
---|---|
Estimation Method | Least Squares Estimation |
Constant | |
---|---|
Variable | Constant |
y1 | -12.01279 |
y2 | 702.08673 |
y3 | -22.42110 |
XLag | |||
---|---|---|---|
Lag | Variable | x1 | x2 |
0 | y1 | 1.69281 | -0.00859 |
y2 | -6.09850 | 2.57980 | |
y3 | -0.02317 | -0.01274 |
AR | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Lag | Variable | y1 | y2 | y3 |
1 | y1 | 0.23699 | 0.00763 | 0.02941 |
y2 | -2.46656 | 0.16379 | -0.84090 | |
y3 | 0.95116 | 0.00224 | 0.93801 |
Schematic Representation | |||
---|---|---|---|
Variable/Lag | C | XL0 | AR1 |
y1 | . | +. | ... |
y2 | + | .+ | ... |
y3 | - | .. | +.+ |
+ is > 2*std error, - is < -2*std error, . is between, * is N/A |
Figure 42.21 shows the parameter estimates and their significance.
Figure 42.21: Parameter Estimates for the VARX(1, 0) Model Continued
Model Parameter Estimates | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Equation | Parameter | Estimate | Standard Error |
t Value | Pr > |t| | Variable |
y1 | CONST1 | -12.01279 | 27.47108 | -0.44 | 0.6691 | 1 |
XL0_1_1 | 1.69281 | 0.54395 | 3.11 | 0.0083 | x1(t) | |
XL0_1_2 | -0.00859 | 0.05361 | -0.16 | 0.8752 | x2(t) | |
AR1_1_1 | 0.23699 | 0.20668 | 1.15 | 0.2722 | y1(t-1) | |
AR1_1_2 | 0.00763 | 0.01627 | 0.47 | 0.6470 | y2(t-1) | |
AR1_1_3 | 0.02941 | 0.04852 | 0.61 | 0.5548 | y3(t-1) | |
y2 | CONST2 | 702.08673 | 256.48046 | 2.74 | 0.0169 | 1 |
XL0_2_1 | -6.09850 | 5.07849 | -1.20 | 0.2512 | x1(t) | |
XL0_2_2 | 2.57980 | 0.50056 | 5.15 | 0.0002 | x2(t) | |
AR1_2_1 | -2.46656 | 1.92967 | -1.28 | 0.2235 | y1(t-1) | |
AR1_2_2 | 0.16379 | 0.15193 | 1.08 | 0.3006 | y2(t-1) | |
AR1_2_3 | -0.84090 | 0.45304 | -1.86 | 0.0862 | y3(t-1) | |
y3 | CONST3 | -22.42110 | 10.31166 | -2.17 | 0.0487 | 1 |
XL0_3_1 | -0.02317 | 0.20418 | -0.11 | 0.9114 | x1(t) | |
XL0_3_2 | -0.01274 | 0.02012 | -0.63 | 0.5377 | x2(t) | |
AR1_3_1 | 0.95116 | 0.07758 | 12.26 | 0.0001 | y1(t-1) | |
AR1_3_2 | 0.00224 | 0.00611 | 0.37 | 0.7201 | y2(t-1) | |
AR1_3_3 | 0.93801 | 0.01821 | 51.50 | 0.0001 | y3(t-1) |
The fitted model is given as