Jack,
Thank you for your answer. You are correct, that is exactly what I am trying to do.
Actually, I thought, that the prior post was just about the same topic. I will try to
implement your suggestions tomorrow, as I have no access to gretl at the moment.
Again, many thanks and please forgive my ignorance in these kind of (basic?)
econometrics.
Jan
Am 29.04.2014 um 19:18 schrieb "Riccardo (Jack) Lucchetti"
<r.lucchetti(a)univpm.it>:
> On Tue, 29 Apr 2014, Jan Tille wrote:
>
> Dear All,
>
> I was trying to estimate a non-linear least squares regression and found the
following discussion from April 2008.
>
>
http://lists.wfu.edu/pipermail/gretl-users/2008-April/002337.html
>
> I changed the code, so that it would accommodate my "model". All Xi's
as
> well as Y are time series. Unfortunately, when I estimate the model, I
> get an error: b1: expect scalar or vector.
>
>
> nls Y= w1*X1+ w2*X2 + w3*X3 + w4*X4 + w5*X5 + w6*X6
[...]
Correct me if I'm wrong, but it looks to me as if what you want to
estimate is in fact a linear model: only, you want to constrain the
parameters to be positive and sum to one. In this case, the classic
thechnique is to use a logit-like transformation: for example:
<hansl>
nulldata 10000
x1 = normal()
x2 = normal()
x3 = normal()
y = 0.5 * x1 + 0.2 * x2 + 0.3 * x3 + normal()
b1 = 0
b2 = 0
nls y = w1 *x1 + w2 * x2 + (1-w1-w2) * x3
e1 = exp(b1)
e2 = exp(b2)
den = 1 + e1 + e2
w1 = e1 / den
w2 = e2 / den
params b1 b2
end nls
printf "w1 = %f, w2 = %f\n", w1, w2
</hansl>
Or have I misunderstood your point?
-------------------------------------------------------
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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