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Suppose you would like to test the hypothesis that one year of attending a university is worth three years of attending a two-year school (junior college), in terms of effect on wages, using the following econometric model:log(wage)=β0+β1jc+β2univ+β3exper + uwhats the Null?

2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:


H_(0) : \beta_(2) = 3 \beta_(1)

Step-by-step explanation:

A null hypothesis (
H_(0)) is a hypothesis that says there is no statistical significance between the two variables. It is usually the hypothesis a researcher or experimenter will try to disprove or discredit.

An alternative hypothesis
(H_(a) ) is a hypothesis that states there is a statistically significant relationship between two variables.

In this example, the hypothesis to test is that one year of attending a university is worth 3 years of attending a two-year junior college

If
\beta_(2) = the number of years of attending a university, and


\beta_(1) = the number of years of attending a junior college

Since 3 years of attending the junior college is equivalent to 1 year of attending the university, the null hypothesis is given by:


H_(0) : \beta_(2) = 3 \beta_(1)

User Wforl
by
4.0k points
2 votes

Answer:


H_0: \beta_2 = 3\beta_1

Step-by-step explanation:

The null hypothesis is the hypothesis that there is no significant difference between specified populations and that any observed difference is due to sampling/experimental error.

We would like to test that one year of attending a university with regression parameter
\beta_2 is worth 3 years of attending a junior college with regression parameter
\beta_1 in terms of the wages earned.

In the model:
log(wage)=\beta_0+\beta_1jc+\beta_2univ+\beta_3exper + u

The null hypothesis will therefore be:


H_0: \beta_2 = 3\beta_1

User Anuragsinhame
by
3.7k points