Springer Texts in Business and Economics
The Wald, LR, and LM Inequality. This is based on Baltagi (1994). The likelihood is given by Eq. (2.1) in the text
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Hence, using (4) and (8), one gets
Hence, using (3) and (11), one gets
where the last equality follows from (10). L(f, 52) is the restricted maximum; therefore, logL(ft, о2) < logL(ft, 52), from which we deduce that W > LR. Also, L(ft, &2) is the unrestricted maximum; therefore log L(ft, о2) > log L(ft, 52), from which we deduce that LR > LM.
An alternative derivation of this inequality shows first that LM W/n LR ( W
n 1 + (W/n) n n)
Then one uses the fact that y > log(1 + y) > y/(1 + y) for y = W/n.