ABSTRACT

Reissuing works originally published between 1929 and 1991, this collection of 17 volumes presents a variety of considerations on Econometrics, from introductions to specific research works on particular industries. With some volumes on models for macroeconomics and international economies, this is a widely interesting set of economic texts. Input/Output methods and databases are looked at in some volumes while others look at Bayesian techniques, linear and non-linear models. This set will be of use to those in industry and business studies, geography and sociology as well as politics and economics.

1. New Mathematical Advances in Economic Dynamics  Edited by David F. Batten and Paul F. Lesse  2. ECESIS: An Interregional Economic-Demographic Model of the United States  Paul M. Beaumont  3. The Use of Economic Statistics  Conrad Alexander Blyth  4. The Statistical Method in Economics and Political Science: A Treatise on the Quantitative and Institutional Approach to Social and Industrial Problems  Philip Sargant Florence  5. Input-Output in the United Kingdom: Proceedings of the 1968 Manchester Conference  Edited by Dr. W. F. Gossling  6. Economic Models and Applications of Solid Waste Management  Hans-Werner Gottinger  7. Input/Output Databases: Uses in Business and Government  Jay M. Gould  8. An Introduction to Quantitative Economics / Brian Haines  9. Applied Discrete-Choice Modelling  David A. Hensher and Lester W. Johnson   10. Dynamic Linear Economic Models  James L. Kenkel  11. Specification Analysis in the Linear Model  Edited by Maxwell L. King and David E. A. Giles  12. Empirical Bayes Methods  J. S. Maritz and T. Lwin  13. Estimation of M-equation Linear Models Subject to a Constraint on the Endogenous Variables  Charles Stockton Roehrig  14. A Structural Model of the U.S. Government Securities Market  V. Vance Roley  15. Mathematical Methods in Economics  Norman Schofield  16. Understanding Econometrics  Jon Stewart  17. An Econometric Model of the U.S. Copper and Aluminum Industries: How Cost Changes Affect Substitution and Recycling  Margaret E. Slade