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In this compelling 1995 book, David Hendry and Mary Morgan bring
together the classic papers of the pioneer econometricians.
Together, these papers form the foundations of econometric thought.
They are essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the
aims, method and methodology of econometrics and the development of
this statistical approach in economics. However, because they are
technically straightforward, the book is also accessible to
students and non-specialists. An editorial commentary places the
readings in their historical context and indicates the continuing
relevance of these early, yet highly sophisticated, works for
current econometric analysis. While this book provides a companion
volume to Mary Morgan's acclaimed The History of Econometric Ideas,
the editors' commentary both adds to that earlier volume and also
provides a stand-alone and synthetic account of the development of
econometrics.
Economists have long sought to develop quantitative models of
economic behaviour, which blend economic theory with data evidence.
Econometric modelling of economic time series has strived to
achieve this by seeking to discover sustainable and interpretable
relationships. This important two-volume collection focuses on a
central method used in selecting such models, namely simplification
of an initially general model that adequately characterizes the
empirical evidence within the investigators' theoretical framework.
The volumes feature a wealth of evidence that has accrued over the
last five years displaying its excellent abilities for model
selection, based on Monte Carlo studies of automatic algorithms.
These also throw light on several major methodological issues, and
prompt many new ideas, which are discussed. The collection will be
valuable to all empirical economists and econometricians.
This open access book focuses on the concepts, tools and techniques
needed to successfully model ever-changing time-series data. It
emphasizes the need for general models to account for the
complexities of the modern world and how these can be applied to a
range of issues facing Earth, from modelling volcanic eruptions,
carbon dioxide emissions and global temperatures, to modelling
unemployment rates, wage inflation and population growth. Except
where otherwise noted, this book is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of
this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0.
This Handbook provides up-to-date coverage of both new developments
and well-established fields in the sphere of economic forecasting.
The chapters are written by world experts in their respective
fields, and provide authoritative yet accessible accounts of the
key concepts, subject matter and techniques in a number of diverse
but related areas. It covers the ways in which the availability of
ever more plentiful data and computational power have been used in
forecasting, either in terms of the frequency of observations, the
number of variables, or the use of multiple data vintages. Greater
data availability has been coupled with developments in statistical
theory and economic theory to allow more elaborate and complicated
models to be entertained; the volume provides explanations and
critiques of these developments. These include factor models, DSGE
models, restricted vector autoregressions, and non-linear models,
as well as models for handling data observed at mixed frequencies,
high-frequency data, multiple data vintages, and methods for
forecasting when there are structural breaks, and how breaks might
be forecast. Also covered are areas which are less commonly
associated with economic forecasting, such as climate change,
health economics, long-horizon growth forecasting, and political
elections. Econometric forecasting has important contributions to
make in these areas, as well as their developments informing the
mainstream. In the early 21st century, climate change and the
forecasting of health expenditures and population are topics of
pressing importance.
"Econometric Modeling" provides a new and stimulating
introduction to econometrics, focusing on modeling. The key issue
confronting empirical economics is to establish sustainable
relationships that are both supported by data and interpretable
from economic theory. The unified likelihood-based approach of this
book gives students the required statistical foundations of
estimation and inference, and leads to a thorough understanding of
econometric techniques.
David Hendry and Bent Nielsen introduce modeling for a range of
situations, including binary data sets, multiple regression, and
cointegrated systems. In each setting, a statistical model is
constructed to explain the observed variation in the data, with
estimation and inference based on the likelihood function.
Substantive issues are always addressed, showing how both
statistical and economic assumptions can be tested and empirical
results interpreted. Important empirical problems such as
structural breaks, forecasting, and model selection are covered,
and Monte Carlo simulation is explained and applied.
"Econometric Modeling" is a self-contained introduction for
advanced undergraduate or graduate students. Throughout, data
illustrate and motivate the approach, and are available for
computer-based teaching. Technical issues from probability theory
and statistical theory are introduced only as needed. Nevertheless,
the approach is rigorous, emphasizing the coherent formulation,
estimation, and evaluation of econometric models relevant for
empirical research.
Nonlinear Econometric Modeling in Time Series presents the more
recent literature on nonlinear time series. Specific topics covered
with respect to nonlinearity include cointegration tests,
risk-related asymmetries, structural breaks and outliers, Bayesian
analysis with a threshold, consistency and asymptotic normality,
asymptotic inference and error-correction models. With a
world-class panel of contributors, this volume addresses topics
with major applications for fields such as foreign-exchange markets
and interest rate analysis. Eleventh in this series of
international symposia, this volume is also part of the European
Conference Series in Quantitative Economics and Econometrics (EC)2.
Since the first edition of this book was published in 1993, David Hendry's work on econometric methodology has become increasingly influential. In this edition he presents a brand new paper which compellingly explains the logic of his general approach to econometric modelling and describes recent major advances in computer-automated modelling, which establish the success of the proposed strategy. Empirical studies of consumers' expenditure and money demands illustrate the methods in action. The breakthrough presented here will make econometric testing much easier.
Professor Hendry has written a systematic and lucid style of econometric modelling of economic time series data. He presents and analyses methodological issues, theoretical developments such as cointegration, and important practical problems. This selfcontained and empirically-oriented work is highly suitable for both practising economists and students, and includes an extensive study of US money demand.
Nonlinear Econometric Modeling in Time Series Analysis presents recent developments in this important area of research. This is the first volume to focus on the more recent literature on nonlinear time series. Specific topics covered with respect to nonlinearity include cointegration tests, risk-related asymmetries, structural breaks and outliers, Bayesian analysis with a threshold, consistency and asymptotic normality, asymptotic inference, and error-correction models.
In this compelling 1995 book, David Hendry and Mary Morgan bring
together the classic papers of the pioneer econometricians.
Together, these papers form the foundations of econometric thought.
They are essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the
aims, method and methodology of econometrics and the development of
this statistical approach in economics. However, because they are
technically straightforward, the book is also accessible to
students and non-specialists. An editorial commentary places the
readings in their historical context and indicates the continuing
relevance of these early, yet highly sophisticated, works for
current econometric analysis. While this book provides a companion
volume to Mary Morgan's acclaimed The History of Econometric Ideas,
the editors' commentary both adds to that earlier volume and also
provides a stand-alone and synthetic account of the development of
econometrics.
Climate Econometrics: An Overview provides a review of the research
in this new and growing field. The structure of the monograph is as
follows: First, section 2 describes econometric methods for
empirical climate modeling that can account for wide-sense
non-stationarity, namely both stochastic trends and location
shifts, with possibly large outliers, as well as dynamics and
non-linearities. Section 3 considers hazards confronting empirical
modeling of nonstationary time-series data using an example where a
counter-intuitive finding is hard to resolve. The framework has a
clear subject-matter theory, so is not mere 'data mining', yet the
empirical result flatly contradicts the well-based theory. Section
4 provides a brief excursion into climate science, mainly concerned
with the composition of the Earth's atmosphere and the role of CO2
as a greenhouse gas. Section 5 considers the consequences, both
good and bad, of the Industrial Revolution raising living standards
beyond the wildest dreams of those living in the 17th century, but
leading to dangerous levels of CO2 emissions from using fossil
fuels and consider applications of climate econometrics against
that background. Section 6 illustrates the approach by modeling
past climate variability over the Ice Ages. Section 7 models UK
annual CO2 emissions over 1860-2017 to walk through the stages of
modeling empirical time series that manifest all the problems of
wide-sense non-stationarity. Section 8 concludes and summarizes a
number of other empirical applications.
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