Chow test

The Chow test, proposed by econometrician Gregory Chow in 1960, is a test of whether the coefficients in two linear regressions on different data sets are equal. In econometrics, it is most commonly used in time series analysis to test for the presence of a structural break at a period which can be assumed to be known a priori (for instance, a major historical event such as a war). In program evaluation, the Chow test is often used to determine whether the independent variables have different impacts on different subgroups of the population.

structural break program evaluation

At there is a structural break, regression on the subintervals and delivers a better modelling than the combined regression(dashed) over the whole interval.

Comparison of two different programs (red, green) existing in a common data set, separate regressions for both programs deliver a better modelling than a combined regression (black).

Suppose that we model our data as

If we split our data into two groups, then we have

and

The null hypothesis of the Chow test asserts that , , and , and there is the assumption that the model errors are independent and identically distributed from a normal distribution with unknown variance.

Let be the sum of squared residuals from the combined data, be the sum of squared residuals from the first group, and be the sum of squared residuals from the second group. and are the number of observations in each group and is the total number of parameters (in this case, 3). Then the Chow test statistic is

The test statistic follows the F distribution with and degrees of freedom.

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