This is a textbook for the standard undergraduate econometrics
course. Its only prerequisites are a semester course in statistics
and one in differential calculus. Arthur Goldberger, an outstanding
researcher and teacher of econometrics, views the subject as a tool
of empirical inquiry rather than as a collection of arcane
procedures. The central issue in such inquiry is how one variable
is related to one or more others. Goldberger takes this to mean
"How does the average value of one variable vary with one or more
others?" and so takes the population conditional mean function as
the target of empirical research.
The structure of the book is similar to that of Goldberger's
graduate-level textbook, "A Course in Econometrics," but the new
book is richer in empirical material, makes no use of matrix
algebra, and is primarily discursive in style. A great strength is
that it is both intuitive and formal, with ideas and methods
building on one another until the text presents fairly complicated
ideas and proofs that are often avoided in undergraduate
econometrics.
To help students master the tools of econometrics, Goldberger
provides many theoretical and empirical exercises and real
micro-and macroeconomic data sets. The data sets, available for
download at www.hup.harvard.edu/features/golint/, deal with
earnings and education, money demand, firm investment, stock
prices, compensation and productivity, and the Phillips curve.
THE DATA SETS CAN BE FOUND HERE.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!