Identifying Common Trend Determinants in Panel Data
Yoonseok Lee,
Peter C. B. Phillips,
Suyong Song and
Donggyu Sul
Additional contact information
Yoonseok Lee: Syracuse University
Peter C. B. Phillips: Yale University, University of Auckland, and Singapore Management University
Suyong Song: University of Iowa
Donggyu Sul: University of Texas at Dallas
No 2504, Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers from Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University
Abstract:
This paper develops a novel method for identifying observable determinants of latent common trends in nonstationary panel data, which are typically removed or controlled in two-way fixed effects regressions. By examining cross sectional dispersion processes, we assess whether panel series exhibit distributional convergence toward specific observed time series, revealing them as long run determinants of the underlying latent trend. The approach also offers a new perspective on cointegration between time series and panel data, focusing on the relative variation of the panel data with respect to the cointegration error. Applying this method to U.S. state-level crime rates demonstrates that the percentage of young adults is a key determinant of violent crime trends, while the incarceration rate drives property crime trends. These findings, which differ from standard two-way fixed effects analysis results, provide a compelling explanation for the sharp decline in U.S. crime rates since the early 1990s.
Pages: 42 pages
Date: 2026-03-10
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-law and nep-mac
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