My main question is: is the statistical significance of an impulse response in a linear VAR dependent on the size of the shock? Or put alternatively, how do the upper/lower confidence interval bands for an impulse response function in a linear VAR scale with the size of the shock?
For example, are the confidence interval bands for a two standard deviation shock simply twice the confidence interval bands for a one standard deviation shock? If yes, this would imply that the statistical significance of the impulse response would not be dependent on the size of the shock. If instead the scaling is more complicated, the statistical significance would be dependent on the shock size.
Lutkepohl (2000) notes that "...the direction or the size of a shock do not have an impact on the shape of the response" (link). However, this refers to the impact response itself, rather than the confidence intervals.
I am asking this question as in standard econometrics packages (e.g. STATA, JMulTi), the default setting for impulse responses is for a one standard deviation shock and it appears very difficult (or impossible) to customize this.