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Summary Instrumental Variables (IV) Explained - Complete Mini-Guide

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Everything you need to know about Instrumental Variables in one focused guide. Covers: When you need IV (OVB, simultaneity, measurement error), the two conditions for valid instruments (relevance & exogeneity), 2SLS procedure step-by-step, weak instruments and the F>10 rule, classic examples (returns to education, class size), IV vs OLS comparison. Includes worked examples, formulas, and common exam questions with answers. 4 pages, printable.

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December 24, 2025
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INSTRUMENTAL VARIABLES (IV) EXPLAINED

ECON2061 Econometrics | Complete Mini-Guide


1. When Do You Need IV?
You need Instrumental Variables when OLS is biased and inconsistent due to:


Problem Why OLS Fails Example


Omitted Variable Bias Corr(X, u) ≠ 0 Ability omitted from wage regression


Simultaneity X affects Y AND Y affects X Price and quantity in supply/demand


Measurement Error X measured with error Self-reported income




Key Insight: When X is correlated with the error term (endogeneity), OLS gives wrong answers. IV provides a solution by using a "clean"
source of variation in X.




2. What Makes a Valid Instrument?
A valid instrument Z must satisfy TWO conditions:


CONDITION 1: RELEVANCE
Corr(Z, X) ≠ 0
The instrument must be correlated with the endogenous variable X
✅ TESTABLE - Use first-stage F-statistic



CONDITION 2: EXOGENEITY (Exclusion Restriction)
Corr(Z, u) = 0
The instrument must affect Y ONLY through X, not directly
❌ NOT TESTABLE - Must argue theoretically




Z → X → Y (Valid)
Z → Y directly (Invalid - violates exogeneity)



3. The Two-Stage Least Squares (2SLS) Procedure

STAGE 1: First-Stage Regression


Regress the endogenous variable X on the instrument Z:
X = π₀ + π₁Z + v


Get the predicted values: X (the "clean" part of X)




STAGE 2: Second-Stage Regression


Regress Y on the predicted values from Stage 1:
Y = β₀ + β₁X + error
̂
β₁ is the IV estimate (consistent if instrument is valid)




⚠ Important: Use statistical software for 2SLS! Manual two-stage gives wrong standard errors.




4. Testing for Weak Instruments

A weak instrument is barely correlated with X. This causes:

Biased IV estimates (can be worse than OLS!)
R163,83
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