plm tries to follow as close as possible the way models are fitted using lm
. This relies on the following steps, using the formula
-data
with some modifications:
model.frame
by getting the relevant arguments (formula
, data
, subset
, weights
, na.action
and offset
) and the supplementary argument,model.frame
the response y
(with pmodel.response
) and the model matrix X
(with model.matrix
),plm.fit
with X
and y
as arguments.Panel data has a special structure which is described by an index
argument. This argument can be used in the pdata.frame
function which returns a pdata.frame
object. A pdata.frame
can be used as input to the data
argument of plm
. If the data
argument of plm
is an ordinary data.frame
, the index
argument can also be supplied as an argument of plm
. In this case, the pdata.frame
function is called internally to transform the data.
Next, the formula
, which is the first and mandatory argument of plm
is coerced to a Formula
object.
model.frame
is then called, but with the data
argument in the first position (a pdata.frame
object) and the formula
in the second position. This unusual order of the arguments enables to use a specific model.frame.pdata.frame
method defined in plm
.
As for the model.frame.formula
method, a data.frame
is returned, with a terms
attribute.
Next, the X
matrix is extracted using model.matrix
. The usual way to do so is to feed the function with two arguments, a formula
or a terms
object and a data.frame
created with model.frame
. lm
uses something like model.matrix(terms(mf), mf)
where mf
is a data.frame
created with model.frame
. Therefore, model.matrix
needs actually one argument and not two and we therefore wrote a model.matrix.pdata.frame
which does the job ; the method first checks that the argument has a term
attribute, extracts the terms
(actually the formula
) and then computes the model’s matrix X
.
The response y
is usually extracted using model.response
, with a data.frame
created with model.frame
as first argument, but it is not generic. We therefore created a generic called pmodel.response
and provide a pmodel.response.pdata.frame
method. We illustrate these features using a simplified (in terms of covariates) example with the SeatBelt
data set:
library("plm")
data("SeatBelt", package = "pder")
$occfat <- with(SeatBelt, log(farsocc / (vmtrural + vmturban)))
SeatBelt<- pdata.frame(SeatBelt) pSB
We start with an OLS (pooling) specification:
<- occfat ~ log(usage) + log(percapin)
formols <- model.frame(pSB, formols)
mfols <- model.matrix(mfols)
Xols <- pmodel.response(mfols)
y coef(lm.fit(Xols, y))
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 7.4193570 0.1657293 -1.1583712
which is equivalent to:
coef(plm(formols, SeatBelt, model = "pooling"))
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 7.4193570 0.1657293 -1.1583712
Next, we use an instrumental variables specification. Variable usage
is endogenous and instrumented by three variables indicating the law context: ds
, dp
, and dsp
.
The model is described using a two-parts formula, the first part of the RHS describing the covariates and the second part the instruments. The following two formulations can be used:
<- occfat ~ log(usage) + log(percapin) | log(percapin) + ds + dp + dsp
formiv1 <- occfat ~ log(usage) + log(percapin) | . - log(usage) + ds + dp + dsp formiv2
The second formulation has two advantages:
-
sign in the second RHS part of the formula.The formula is coerced to a Formula
, using the Formula
package. model.matrix.pdata.frame
then internally calls model.matrix.Formula
in order to extract the covariates and instruments model matrices:
<- model.frame(pSB, formiv1)
mfSB1 <- model.matrix(mfSB1, rhs = 1)
X1 <- model.matrix(mfSB1, rhs = 2)
W1 head(X1, 3) ; head(W1, 3)
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 8 1 -0.7985077 9.955748
## 9 1 -0.4155154 9.975622
## 10 1 -0.4155154 10.002110
## (Intercept) log(percapin) ds dp dsp
## 8 1 9.955748 0 0 0
## 9 1 9.975622 1 0 0
## 10 1 10.002110 1 0 0
For the second (and preferred formulation), the dot
argument should be set and is passed to the Formula
methods. .
has actually two meanings:
which correspond respectively to dot = "seperate"
(the default) and dot = "previous"
. See the difference between the following two examples:
library("Formula")
head(model.frame(Formula(formiv2), SeatBelt), 3)
## occfat log(usage) log(percapin) state year farsocc farsnocc usage
## 8 -3.788976 -0.7985077 9.955748 AK 1990 90 8 0.45
## 9 -3.904837 -0.4155154 9.975622 AK 1991 81 20 0.66
## 10 -3.699611 -0.4155154 10.002110 AK 1992 95 13 0.66
## percapin unemp meanage precentb precenth densurb densrur
## 8 21073 7.05 29.58628 0.04157167 0.03252657 1.099419 0.1906836
## 9 21496 8.75 29.82771 0.04077293 0.03280357 1.114670 0.1906712
## 10 22073 9.24 30.21070 0.04192957 0.03331731 1.114078 0.1672785
## viopcap proppcap vmtrural vmturban fueltax lim65 lim70p mlda21 bac08
## 8 0.0009482704 0.008367458 2276 1703 8 0 0 1 0
## 9 0.0010787370 0.008940661 2281 1740 8 0 0 1 0
## 10 0.0011257068 0.008366873 2005 1836 8 1 0 1 0
## ds dp dsp
## 8 0 0 0
## 9 1 0 0
## 10 1 0 0
head(model.frame(Formula(formiv2), SeatBelt, dot = "previous"), 3)
## occfat log(usage) log(percapin) ds dp dsp
## 8 -3.788976 -0.7985077 9.955748 0 0 0
## 9 -3.904837 -0.4155154 9.975622 1 0 0
## 10 -3.699611 -0.4155154 10.002110 1 0 0
In the first case, all the covariates are returned by model.frame
as the .
is understood by default as “everything.”
In plm
, the dot
argument is internally set to previous
so that the end-user doesn’t have to worry about these subtleties.
<- model.frame(pSB, formiv2)
mfSB2 <- model.matrix(mfSB2, rhs = 1)
X2 <- model.matrix(mfSB2, rhs = 2)
W2 head(X2, 3) ; head(W2, 3)
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 8 1 -0.7985077 9.955748
## 9 1 -0.4155154 9.975622
## 10 1 -0.4155154 10.002110
## (Intercept) log(percapin) ds dp dsp
## 8 1 9.955748 0 0 0
## 9 1 9.975622 1 0 0
## 10 1 10.002110 1 0 0
The IV estimator can then be obtained as a 2SLS estimator: First, regress the covariates on the instruments and get the fitted values:
<- lm.fit(W1, X1)$fitted.values
HX1 head(HX1, 3)
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 8 1 -1.0224257 9.955748
## 9 1 -0.5435055 9.975622
## 10 1 -0.5213364 10.002110
Next, regress the response on these fitted values:
coef(lm.fit(HX1, y))
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 7.5641209 0.1768576 -1.1722590
The same can be achieved in one command by using the formula
-data
interface with plm
:
coef(plm(formiv1, SeatBelt, model = "pooling"))
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 7.5641209 0.1768576 -1.1722590
or with the ivreg
function from package AER
(or with the newer function ivreg
in package ivreg
superseding AER::ivreg()
):
coef(AER::ivreg(formiv1, data = SeatBelt))
## (Intercept) log(usage) log(percapin)
## 7.5641209 0.1768576 -1.1722590