posted on 2010-02-12, 10:19authored byD.S.G. Pollock
An account is given of a variety of filtering procedures that have been implemented
in a computer program, which can be used in analysing econometric time series. The
program provides some new filtering procedures that operate primarily in the frequency
domain. Their advantage is that they are able to achieve clear separations of components
of the data that reside in adjacent frequency bands in a way that the conventional
time-domain methods cannot.
Several procedures that operate exclusively within the time domain have also been
implemented in the program. Amongst these are the bandpass filters of Baxter and
King and of Christiano and Fitzgerald, which have been used in estimating business
cycles. The Henderson filter, the Butterworth filter and the Leser or Hodrick–Prescott
filter are also implemented. These are also described in this paper
Econometric filtering procedures are required to accommodate the trends that
are typical of economic time series. If a trended data sequence has been reduced to
stationarity by differencing prior to its filtering, then the filtered sequence will need
to be re-inflated. This can be achieved within the time domain via the summation
operator, which is the inverse of the difference operator. The effects of the differencing
can also be reversed within the frequency domain by recourse to the frequency-response
function of the summation operator.