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This textbook articulates the elements of good craftsmanship in
applied microeconomic research and demonstrates its effectiveness
with multiple examples from economic literature. Empirical economic
research is a combination of several elements: theory, econometric
modelling, institutional analysis, data handling, estimation,
inference, and interpretation. A large body of work demonstrates
how to do many of these things correctly, but to date, there is no
central resource available which articulates the essential
principles involved and ties them together. In showing how these
research elements can be best blended to maximize the credibility
and impact of the findings that result, this book presents a basic
framework for thinking about craftsmanship. This framework lays out
the proper context within which the researcher should view the
analysis, involving institutional factors, complementary policy
instruments, and competing hypotheses that can influence or explain
the phenomena being studied. It also emphasizes the
interconnectedness of theory, econometric modeling, data,
estimation, inference, and interpretation, arguing that good
craftsmanship requires strong links between each. Once the
framework has been set, the book devotes a chapter to each element
of the analysis, providing robust instruction for each case.
Assuming a working knowledge of econometrics, this text is aimed at
graduate students and early-career academic researchers as well as
empirical economists looking to improve their technique.
"Robert, I don't have any savings. My house is worth less than I
owe on it. I have no rich relatives. Mary's car was totaled, and
mine's a piece of junk. I have little hope my wife will live, and
if the child survives, he will be severely handicapped and need
medical attention and care all his life." Joe paused trying to
imagine what the future might hold for him and his son. "Possibly
down the road when I'm more financially secure, I can adopt your
standards, if I feel convicted to, but for the time I'm stuck with
the state plan. Besides, I've paid my taxes all my life. Don't they
owe it to me? I don't see how I can do it otherwise." Joe has to
face reality...everything he has worked for, everything he loves in
life is crashing around him and he is being pressured on all sides
to cave in to the inevitable. Will he give up his rights and bow to
the darkness surrounding him or will his faith in God's providence,
and his convictions cause him to do the absolute right?
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