Micro-panels are longitudinal data sets that contain observations on multiple units at only a few points in time. Examples include the performance of start-up companies, developmental skills of small children or revenues and leverage of banks after significant regulatory changes. When working with micro-panels, it is challenging to build accurate predictive models, as the time series are too short to contain enough information on their own.
Posterior Mean Panel Predictor (PMPP) takes an empirical-Bayes approach to computing forecasts with micro-panels. It uses cross-sectional information in the data to approximate the posterior mean of heterogeneous coefficients under a correlated random effects distribution. It has been shown to provide predictions of higher accuracy compared to the state-of-the-art methods for dynamic panel modelling. For more details, see the references in pmpp()
function manual.
The package allows for the following:
Additionally, the package exports a number of functions that can be used outside of the scope of PMPP modelling:
kde()
for computing a robust kernel density estimate;kde2D()
for computing a robust 2-dimensional kernel density estimate;create_fframe()
for adding time periods to a panel-structured data frame;ssys_gmm()
, the suboptimal multi-step System-GMM estimator for AR(1) panel data model.The central function in the package is pmpp()
. It estimates the model's coefficients and outputs an object of class pmpp
. This class has the plot
and summary
methods, with the former plotting the distribution of individual-specific effects and the latter allowing to inspect model's coeffcients and fit measures.
To compute predictions with the PMPP model, one needs to construct the forecast frame with create_fframe()
. The forecast frame and the corresponding model object can be passed along to the predict
method to obtain forecasts.
In order to calculate prediction intervals, the pmpp_predinterval()
function can be used. This function, similarly to the predict
method, takes the model object and the forecast frame as inputs. Be warned: bootstrapping of prediction interval might take time!
# Get data
data(EmplUK, package = "plm")
EmplUK <- dplyr::filter(EmplUK, year %in% c(1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982))
# Run the model predicting employment
pmpp_model <- pmpp(dep_var = "emp", data = EmplUK)
summary(pmpp_model)
# Compute predictions for following three years
my_fframe <- create_fframe(EmplUK, 1983:1985)
prediction <- predict(pmpp_model, my_fframe)
# Compute prediction intervals
intervals <- pmpp_predinterval(pmpp_model, my_fframe, boot_reps = 20, confidence = 0.95)
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