In this post, I explore the variations in Structural VARs (SVARs) and their recent applications. This is mostly an amalgam of notes based on my readings of multiple lecture notes, papers, and documentations.
Discussion of issues and challenges in identification is as important as in empirical macroeconomics as it is applied microeconomics. Here are two motivating examples:
Effect of Monetary Policy
Conclusion: interest rate hike $\Rightarrow$ rise in inflation
Effect of Fiscal Spending
Conclusion: public spending $\Rightarrow$ decline in output
In both examples, the primary issue is that policy choices (rates, fiscal spending) are endogenous to expectations of economic variables (inflation, output). To circumvent this issue, we want to identify purely exogenous shocks.
The goal of an SVAR is to go from a reduced form VAR:
$$ X_t = F X_{t-1}+e_t $$
in which $e_t$ are not structural shocks, to a structural VAR:
$$ AX_t = G X_{t-1} + u_t $$
where $F = A^{-1}G, e_t = A^{-1}u_t$. So as long as we obtain $A$, we should be done.