Abstract

This paper considers the consistency property of some test statistics based on a time series of data. While the usual consistency criterion is based on keeping the sampling interval fixed, we let the sampling interval take any equispaced path as the sample size increases to infinity. We consider tests of the null hypotheses of the random walk and randomness against positive autocorrelation (stationary or explosive). We show that tests of the unit root hypothesis based on the first-order correlation coefficient of the original data are consistent as long as the span of the data is increasing. Tests of the same hypothesis based on the first-order correlation coefficient of the first-differenced data are consistent against stationary alternatives only if the span is increasing at a rate greater than T ½ , where T is the sample size. On the other hand, tests of the randomness hypothesis based on the first-order correlation coefficient applied to the original data are consistent as long as the span is not increasing too fast. We provide Monte Carlo evidence on the power, in finite samples, of the tests Studied allowing various combinations of span and sampling frequencies. It is found that the consistency properties summarize well the behavior of the power in finite samples. The power of tests for a unit root is more influenced by the span than the number of observations while tests of randomness are more powerful when a small sampling frequency is available.

Keywords

MathematicsStatisticsConsistency (knowledge bases)AutocorrelationRandomnessSampling (signal processing)Statistical hypothesis testingSpan (engineering)Sample size determinationNull hypothesisUnit rootMonte Carlo methodDiscrete mathematicsComputer science

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Publication Info

Year
1991
Type
article
Volume
7
Issue
3
Pages
341-368
Citations
128
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Pierre Perrón (1991). Test Consistency with Varying Sampling Frequency. Econometric Theory , 7 (3) , 341-368. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0266466600004503

Identifiers

DOI
10.1017/s0266466600004503