When is the Use of Gaussian-Inverse Wishart-Haar Priors Appropriate?

36 Pages Posted: 12 Jul 2024

See all articles by Atsushi Inoue

Atsushi Inoue

Vanderbilt University - College of Arts and Science - Department of Economics

Lutz Kilian

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas; Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)

Date Written: July, 2024

Abstract

Several recent studies have expressed concern that the Haar prior typically employed in estimating sign-identified VAR models is driving the prior about the structural impulse responses and hence their posterior. In this paper, we provide evidence that the quantitative importance of the Haar prior for posterior inference has been overstated. How sensitive posterior inference is to the Haar prior depends on the width of the identified set of a given impulse response. We demonstrate that this width depends not only on how much the identified set is narrowed by the identifying restrictions imposed on the model, but also depends on the data through the reduced-form model parameters. Hence, the role of the Haar prior can only be assessed on a case-by-case basis. We show by example that, when the identification is sufficiently tight, posterior inference based on a Gaussian-inverse Wishart-Haar prior provides a reasonably accurate approximation.

Keywords: Bayesian VAR, impulse response, sign restrictions, set-identification, Haar prior

JEL Classification: C22, C32, C52, E31

Suggested Citation

Inoue, Atsushi and Kilian, Lutz, When is the Use of Gaussian-Inverse Wishart-Haar Priors Appropriate? (July, 2024). FRB of Dallas Working Paper No. 2404, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4891547 or http://dx.doi.org/10.24149/wp2404

Atsushi Inoue (Contact Author)

Vanderbilt University - College of Arts and Science - Department of Economics ( email )

Box 1819 Station B
Nashville, TN 37235
United States

Lutz Kilian

Federal Reserve Banks - Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas ( email )

2200 North Pearl Street
PO Box 655906
Dallas, TX 75265-5906
United States

Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) ( email )

London
United Kingdom

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