The CCE model applied to the nexus of real GDP and the insurance market
(2021) NEKN01 20211Department of Economics
- Abstract
- Existing studies on the relationship between the insurance market and economic development tend to use empirical methods that rely on the unrealistic assumption of cross-sectional independence. This thesis aims to highlight the drawbacks of this assumption. The results are achieved by comparing the results of the Common Correlated Effects (CCE) model to the two-way fixed effects model as well as the fixed effects model. All three models confirm most previous research, stating that there is a positive cointegrated relationship between the insurance market and real GDP. However, the results show that the CCE model accounts for more unobserved heterogeneity than the competition. This is indicated by a higher degree of normally distributed... (More)
- Existing studies on the relationship between the insurance market and economic development tend to use empirical methods that rely on the unrealistic assumption of cross-sectional independence. This thesis aims to highlight the drawbacks of this assumption. The results are achieved by comparing the results of the Common Correlated Effects (CCE) model to the two-way fixed effects model as well as the fixed effects model. All three models confirm most previous research, stating that there is a positive cointegrated relationship between the insurance market and real GDP. However, the results show that the CCE model accounts for more unobserved heterogeneity than the competition. This is indicated by a higher degree of normally distributed residuals which are assigned a significantly lower degree of absolute average pairwise correlation. Therefore, the estimates produced by the CCE model are more reliable, making it more appropriate to use when investigating cross-sectionally dependent panel data. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/9057933
- author
- Werner, Isak LU
- supervisor
- organization
- course
- NEKN01 20211
- year
- 2021
- type
- H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
- subject
- keywords
- Insurance market, economic development, cross-sectional dependence, cointegration, CCE estimation.
- language
- English
- id
- 9057933
- date added to LUP
- 2021-07-05 13:29:00
- date last changed
- 2021-07-05 13:29:00
@misc{9057933, abstract = {{Existing studies on the relationship between the insurance market and economic development tend to use empirical methods that rely on the unrealistic assumption of cross-sectional independence. This thesis aims to highlight the drawbacks of this assumption. The results are achieved by comparing the results of the Common Correlated Effects (CCE) model to the two-way fixed effects model as well as the fixed effects model. All three models confirm most previous research, stating that there is a positive cointegrated relationship between the insurance market and real GDP. However, the results show that the CCE model accounts for more unobserved heterogeneity than the competition. This is indicated by a higher degree of normally distributed residuals which are assigned a significantly lower degree of absolute average pairwise correlation. Therefore, the estimates produced by the CCE model are more reliable, making it more appropriate to use when investigating cross-sectionally dependent panel data.}}, author = {{Werner, Isak}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{The CCE model applied to the nexus of real GDP and the insurance market}}, year = {{2021}}, }