Nonstationary Time Series Models Using ARDL and NARDL Estimation

Authors

  • Mayson Abid Hussein*
  • Munaf Yousif Hmood

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33095/afbrge60

Keywords:

ARDL, NARDL, Co-integration, Philips-Perron, Bounds Test, Money Supply.

Abstract

The paper features an examination of the link between the behavior of the Money supply and Bank deposit in both an autoregressive distributed lag ARDL, plus a nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag NARDL framework. The regression relationship between any two nonstationary time series suffer from the problem of superior regression and the results may be incorrect and unreliable, and to overcome this problem the aim of this paper was find a balanced relationship in the long - run between the variables of Money supply and Bank deposits using the method of cointegration by focusing on the behavior of the residuals of the cointegration model based on monthly data for a time series for the period (2010-2015). The time series stationary test was done by conducting the Unit Root Test based on the Philips-Perron test to find out the stationary of the variables and then detect the existence of the cointegration using the bounds testing, the tests showed the nonstationary of the time series at level I(0) and their become stationary after taking the first differences I(1). Bounds test showed the existence of cointegration .The Error correction model for the ARDL model was the best, despite the convergence of most of the test results for the two models, but the ARDL model was  the more accurate with the speed of adjustment in the short -run to return to long-run equilibrium, as it reached (37%) and a period of two months for the ARDL model, while the percentage for the NARDL model was equal to (28%) and a period of time of approximately three and a half months.

 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Published

2024-07-01

Issue

Section

Statistical Researches

How to Cite

“Nonstationary Time Series Models Using ARDL and NARDL Estimation” (2024) Journal of Economics and Administrative Sciences, 30(141), pp. 439–456. doi:10.33095/afbrge60.

Similar Articles

11-20 of 464

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.