
It is known that Efron’s bootstrap of the mean of a distribution in the domain of attraction of the stable laws with infinite variance is not consistent, in the sense that the limiting distribution of the bootstrap mean is not the same as the limiting distribution of the mean from the real sample. Moreover, the limiting bootstrap distribution is random and unknown. The conventional remedy for this problem, at least asymptotically, is either themout ofnbootstrap or subsampling. However, we show that both these procedures can be unreliable in other than very large samples. We introduce a parametric bootstrap that overcomes the failure of Efron’s bootstrap and performs better than themout ofnbootstrap and subsampling. The quality of inference based on the parametric bootstrap is examined in a simulation study, and is found to be satisfactory with heavy-tailed distributions unless the tail index is close to 1 and the distribution is heavily skewed.
bootstrap inconsistency,stable distribution,domain of attraction,infinite variance, Asymptotic distribution theory in statistics, Bootstrap, jackknife and other resampling methods, [SHS] Humanities and Social Sciences, [SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance, Applications of statistics to economics, Economie quantitative
bootstrap inconsistency,stable distribution,domain of attraction,infinite variance, Asymptotic distribution theory in statistics, Bootstrap, jackknife and other resampling methods, [SHS] Humanities and Social Sciences, [SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance, Applications of statistics to economics, Economie quantitative
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