How to do Nonparametric kernel regression in Stata

Today we Learn how to do Nonparametric kernel regression in Stata

Nonparametric series regression (NPSR) estimates mean outcomes for a given set of covariates, just like linear regression. Unlike linear regression, NPSR is agnostic about the functional form of the outcome in terms of the covariates, which means that NPSR is not subject to misspecification error.

In NPSR, you specify the dependent variable and its determinants. NPSR determines the functional form. If you type

. npregress series y x1 x2 x3

you are specifying that

y=g(x1,x2,x3)+ϵy=g(x1,x2,x3)+ϵ

You are placing no functional-form restrictions on g()g(). g()g() is not required to be linear, although it could be.

g(x1,x2,x3)=β1×1+β2×2+β3x2g(x1,x2,x3)=β1×1+β2×2+β3×2

g()g() is not required to be linear in the parameters, although it could be.

g(x1,x2,x3)=β1×1+β2×22+β3x31x2+β4x3g(x1,x2,x3)=β1×1+β2×22+β3x13x2+β4×3

Or g()g() could be

g(x1,x2,x3)=β1xβ21+g(x1,x2,x3)=β1×1β2+ cos(x2x3)+ϵ(x2x3)+ϵ

Or g()g() could be anything else you can imagine.

The jargon for this is that g()g() is fully nonparametric.

What you specify does not have to be fully nonparametric. You can impose structure. Type

. npregress series y x1 x2 x3, nointeract(x3)

and you are specifying

y=g1(x1,x2)+g2(x3)+ϵy=g1(x1,x2)+g2(x3)+ϵ

Type

. npregress series y x1 x2 x3, nointeract(x2 x3)

and you are specifying

y=g1(x1)+g2(x2)+g3(x3)+ϵy=g1(x1)+g2(x2)+g3(x3)+ϵ

Type

. npregress series y x1 x2, asis(x3)

and you are specifying

y=g1(x1,x2)+β3×3+ϵy=g1(x1,x2)+β3×3+ϵ

You specify how general—how nonparametric—the model is that you want to fit.

The fitted model is not returned in algebraic form. In fact, the function is never even found in algebraic form. It is approximated by a series, and you can choose polynomial series, natural spline series, or a B-spline series. npregress series reports

  • average marginal effects for continuous covariates
  • contrasts for discrete covariates

npregress series needs more observations than linear regression to produce consistent estimates, and the number of observations required grows with the number of covariates and the complexity of g()g().

Let’s see it work

We have fictional data on wine output from 512 wine-producing counties around the world. output will be our dependent variable. We believe output is affected by

taxleveltaxes on wine production
rainfallrainfall in mm/hour
irrigatewhether winery irrigates

Our main interest is to see how tax levels affect wine yield, and we include rainfall and irrigate as controls so that the effect of taxlevel is correctly measured.

We start by fitting the model.

. npregress series output taxlevel rainfall i.irrigate

Computing approximating function

Minimizing cross-validation criterion

Iteration 0:  Cross-validation criterion =  109.7216

Computing average derivatives

Cubic B-spline estimation                  Number of obs      =            512
Criterion: cross validation                Number of knots    =              1

                             Robust      output       Effect   Std. Err.      z    P>|z|     [95% Conf. Interval]    taxlevel    -296.8132    14.2256   -20.86   0.000    -324.6949   -268.9316    rainfall     53.45136   9.427198     5.67   0.000     34.97439    71.92833       irrigate      (1 vs 0)       8.40677   1.022549     8.22   0.000     6.402611    10.41093
Note: Effect estimates are averages of derivatives for continuous covariates
      and averages of contrasts for factor covariates.

The output reports effects of -297, 53, and 8.4 for taxlevelrainfall, and irrigate

Start with the -297. taxlevel is a continuous variable, so -297 is a “average marginal effect”, meaning it is the average derivative of output with respect to taxlevel. Said differently, the marginal effect is what economists would call the average marginal effect of taxes on output. Higher taxes result in lower output.

Now consider the 53, which is also an average marginal effect because rainfall is a continuous variable. Higher rainfall increases wine output.

Finally, there is the 8.4, which is a contrast because irrigate is a factor (dummy) variable. irrigate is 1 if the wine grower irrigates and 0 otherwise. The contrast of 8.4 is the average effect for a discrete change. It is the difference of what the mean output would be if all producers irrigated and what the mean output would be if no producers irrigated. 8.4 means a positive treatment effect of irrigation.

Do these estimated effects answer your research question? They might, but if they do not, we can obtain whatever estimated effects we need using Stata’s margins command. If we need to explore the effects of various tax levels, say between 11 and 29 percent, we can type

.  margins, at(taxlevel=(.11(.03).29)) 

   (output omitted)

It produces a table of effects and standard errors that we omitted because we want to show the result graphically, which we do simply by typing marginsplot after producing a table using margins.

. marginsplot
npseries-gph.png

The effect of taxes is not linear.

You are not restricted to exploring the function one variable at a time. You could investigate the mean output for different levels of taxes and irrigation by typing

. margins irrigate, at(taxlevel=(.11(.03).29))

You could investigate mean output for different levels of taxes and irrigation and rainfall by typing

. margins irrigate, at(taxlevel=(.11(.03).29)) at(rainfall=(.01(.05).33))

Take a minute to appreciate this. We believe that wine output is a function of taxes, rainfall, and irrigation, but we do not know the function. We can nonetheless fit an approximation to the unknown function and explore it to gain statistical insight using npregress seriesmargins, and marginsplot.

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