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Microeconometrics and Matlab
An Introduction

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Format
Paperback, 256 pages
Other Formats Available

Hardback : HK$1,340.00

Published
United Kingdom, 1 March 2016

This book is a practical guide for theory-based empirical analysis in economics that guides the reader through the first steps when moving between economic theory and applied research. The book provides a hands-on introduction to some of the techniques that economists use for econometric estimation and shows how to convert a selection of standard and advanced estimators into MATLAB code.The book first provides a brief introduction to MATLAB and
its syntax, before moving into microeconometric applications studied in undergraduate and graduate econometrics courses. Along with standard estimation methods such as, for example, Method of Moments,
Maximum Likelihood, and constrained optimisation, the book also includes a series of chapters examining more advanced research methods. These include discrete choice, discrete games, dynamic models on a finite and infinite horizon, and semi- and nonparametric methods. In closing, it discusses more advanced features that can be used to optimise use of MATLAB, including parallel computing.Each chapter is structured around a number of worked examples, designed for the
reader to tackle as they move through the book. Each chapter ends with a series of readings, questions, and extensions, designed to help the reader on their way to adapting the examples in the book to fit
their own research questions.

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Product Description

This book is a practical guide for theory-based empirical analysis in economics that guides the reader through the first steps when moving between economic theory and applied research. The book provides a hands-on introduction to some of the techniques that economists use for econometric estimation and shows how to convert a selection of standard and advanced estimators into MATLAB code.The book first provides a brief introduction to MATLAB and
its syntax, before moving into microeconometric applications studied in undergraduate and graduate econometrics courses. Along with standard estimation methods such as, for example, Method of Moments,
Maximum Likelihood, and constrained optimisation, the book also includes a series of chapters examining more advanced research methods. These include discrete choice, discrete games, dynamic models on a finite and infinite horizon, and semi- and nonparametric methods. In closing, it discusses more advanced features that can be used to optimise use of MATLAB, including parallel computing.Each chapter is structured around a number of worked examples, designed for the
reader to tackle as they move through the book. Each chapter ends with a series of readings, questions, and extensions, designed to help the reader on their way to adapting the examples in the book to fit
their own research questions.

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Product Details
EAN
9780198754503
ISBN
0198754507
Other Information
Illustrated
Dimensions
23.1 x 15.2 x 1 centimeters (0.37 kg)

Table of Contents

I: Foundations
1: Entering the 'Matrix Laboratory'
2: The Agent Optimises
3: The Economist Optimises
II: Discrete Choice
4: Discrete Multinomial Choice
5: Discrete Games
III: Dynamics
6: Dynamic Choice on a Finite Horizon
7: Dynamic Choice on an Infinite Horizon
IV: Non-Parametric Methods
8: Nonparametric Regression
9: Semiparametric Methods
V: Speed
10: Speeding Things Up. . .
11: . . and Slowing Things Down

About the Author

Abi Adams is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University of Oxford, a Research Fellow at the Institute of Fiscal Studies and a Cowles Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow. Her research focuses on consumer choice, with a particular interest in nonparametric methods and revealed preference theory.

Damian Clarke is a DPhil (PhD) student in economics at the University of Oxford, with research focusing on maternal and child health and education, fertility and family size, and applied microeconometrics. Damian has worked for a range of international organisations and government bodies in Latin America and in West Africa.
Simon Quinn is an Associate Professor of Economics and a Deputy Director of the Centre for the Study of African Economies at the University of Oxford. Simon's research interests lie primarily in the study of firms and development.

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