
The Theory and Practice of Econometrics
George G. Judge(Author)
Wiley (Publisher)
Published on 4. January 1985
Book
Hardback
1056 pages
978-0-471-89530-5 (ISBN)
Description
This broadly based graduate--level textbook covers the major models and statistical tools currently used in the practice of econometrics. It examines the classical, the decision theory, and the Bayesian approaches, and contains material on single equation and simultaneous equation econometric models. Includes an extensive reference list for each topic.
More details
Series
Edition
2nd Edition
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 243 mm
Width: 172 mm
Thickness: 55 mm
Weight
1628 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-471-89530-5 (9780471895305)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
George Judge is an American econometrician and Professor in the Graduate School in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics located in the UC Berkeley College of Natural Resources. William E. Griffiths is the author of The Theory and Practice of Econometrics, 2nd Edition, published by Wiley.
Content
SAMPLING THEORY AND BAYESIAN APPROACHES TO INFERENCE. The Classical Inference Approach for the General Linear Model. Statistical Decision Theory and Biased Estimation. The Bayesian Approach to Inference. INFERENCE IN GENERAL STATISTICAL MODELS AND TIME SERIES. Some Asymptotic Theory and Other General Results for the Linear Statistical Model. Nonlinear Statistical Models. Time Series. DYNAMIC SPECIFICATIONS. Autocorrelation. Finite Distributed Lags. Infinite Distributed Lags. SOME ALTERNATIVE COVARIANCE STRUCTURES. Heteroskedasticity. Disturbance--Related Sets of Regression Equations. Inference in Models that Combine Time Series and Cross--Sectional Data. INFERENCE IN SIMULTANEOUS EQUATION MODELS. Specification and Identification in Simultaneous Equation Models. Estimation and Inference in a System of Simultaneous Equations. Multiple Time Series and Systems of Dynamic Simultaneous Equations. FURTHER MODEL EXTENSIONS. Unobservable Variables. Qualitative and Limited Dependent Variable Models. Varying and Random Coefficient Models. Non--Normal Disturbances. On Selecting the Set of Aggressors. Multicollinearity. Appendices.