Do these kpss critical values come from a table somewhere stored
within gretl? I notice they don't change when the sample size
doesn't.. if so, wouldn't it be trivial to access them & comloare them
to the test value?
Thanks
TMN
On Sat, May 17, 2014 at 4:19 PM, Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti
<r.lucchetti(a)univpm.it> wrote:
On Sat, 17 May 2014, Tim Nall wrote:
> OK, this is great so far, but one prob:
>
> The gretl documentation says that the interpolated p-value for kpss
> "should not be taken too seriously". So I have the test value... and
> now I want to compare that to the *critical value* at the 5% level ...
> I want to compare 0.403951 (which I know how to access) to 0.473 (see
> output below):
>
> T = 40
> Lag truncation parameter = 3
> Test statistic = 0.403951
>
> 10% 5% 1%
> Critical values: 0.352 0.473 0.719
> Interpolated p-value 0.079
"Serisously" perhaps is too strong a word here. What we mean is that we are
not aware of an algorithm which will give you exact p-values for the KPSS
test, so we rely on linear interpolation, banking on the fact that the
p-value function is monotone by definition. Certainly, the p-value for
0.403951 is between 10% and 5%, and I would be very surprised if it turned
out to be very different from 8%.
-------------------------------------------------------
Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti
Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche e Sociali (DiSES)
Università Politecnica delle Marche
(formerly known as Università di Ancona)
r.lucchetti(a)univpm.it
http://www2.econ.univpm.it/servizi/hpp/lucchetti
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Best regards,
Timothy M. Nall
Assistant Professor
National Quemoy University
Kinmen, Taiwan