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My question is motivated by Do, Joshi, and Stopler's paper "Can Environmental Policy Reduce Infant Mortality? Evidence from the Ganga Pollution Cases".

A simplified form of their models that describes the question is:

$$y_i =\beta_0 +\beta_1 X_i +\varepsilon_i $$

Which would be estimated (1) using only $Z_{1i}$ as an instrument and (2) using $Z_{1i}$ and $Z_{2i}$ as instruments. The goal is to determine if $Z_{2i}$ is a valid instrument (uncorrelated with $\varepsilon_i$). They "know" $Z_{1i}$ is valid.

Their method is to use a C-statistic, which as far as I can tell is the difference in Sargan-Hansen test statistics between the two models, and would be distributed as $\chi^2_1$ because the number of instruments differs by 1.

My question is, wouldn't the Sargan-Hansen test from (1) just give 0? The equation is exactly identified. Thus, doesn't the C-statistic just reduce to a Sargan-Hansen test of (2)? Is there something I am missing? Are they, perhaps, just trying to show they are aware of complicated techniques to signal intelligence? Or is it more appropriate to call it a C-statistic due to the comparative nature?

TIA!

Michael Gmeiner
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Yes, you are correct about the conclusion that $J_{n1}=0$ and hence $C_{n}=J_{n}-J_{n1}=J_{n}$. However, despite the test statistics are the same, the asymptotical distributions and critical values are the same, they are derived from different procedure under different null hypothesis, I prefer to keep using the name C-test instead of Sargan-Hansen test.

Q9y5
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