ABSTRACT

The book's comprehensive coverage on the application of econometric methods to empirical analysis of economic issues is impressive. It uncovers the missing link between textbooks on economic theory and econometrics and highlights the powerful connection between economic theory and empirical analysis perfectly through examples on rigorous experimental design. The use of data sets for estimation derived with the Monte Carlo method helps facilitate the understanding of the role of hypothesis testing applied to economic models.

Topics covered in the book are: consumer behavior, producer behavior, market equilibrium, macroeconomic models, qualitative-response models, panel data analysis and time-series analysis. Key econometric models are introduced, specified, estimated and evaluated. The treatment on methods of estimation in econometrics and the discipline of hypothesis testing makes it a must-have for graduate students of economics and econometrics and aids their understanding on how to estimate economic models and evaluate the results in terms of policy implications.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter |41 pages

Consumer behavior

chapter |28 pages

Producer behavior

chapter |32 pages

Market equilibrium models

chapter |31 pages

Macroeconomic Models

chapter |25 pages

Microeconomic analysis using micro-data

Qualitative-response models

chapter |1 pages

Summary and conclusion