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Mastering 'Metrics: The Path from Cause to Effect

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But the IV chapter was better in terms of the details whereas RDD chapter isn't as heavy on those details. So the detailing level has to be consistent. Further there is a need to link the discussions. Suddenly a topic is completed and another section starts with a new topic. This to me seems disconnected and you don't really get the flow in the argument while reading the book. So i have almost reached halfway chapter 4 where RDD is being discussed. I found the chapters imbalanced. Like the IV chapter was very heavy and was not a smoother flow like the other ones.

In our experience, most econometrics teachers enjoy working with data, and they hope and expect that their students will too. Yet, a sad consequence of the inherited econometrics canon is its drabness. This is really too bad because modern applied econometrics is interesting, relevant, and, yes, fun! Instructors who have as much fun teaching econometrics as they do when they use it in their research can hope to transmit their excitement to their students. In addition to having a good time, we plant the seeds of useful data analysis in the next generation of scholars, policy-makers, and an economically literate citizenry. The promise of our approach to instruction is evident in the popularity of the Freakonomics franchise and in the sparkling new intro-to-economics principles book by Acemoglu, Laibson, and List (2015): their take on economics puts questions and evidence ahead of abstract models. We’re happy to join these colleagues in an effort to polish and renew our profession’s rusty instructional canon.

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You have requested "on-the-fly" machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer Posing several well-chosen empirical questions in social science, Mastering 'Metrics develops methods to provide the answers and applies them to interesting datasets. This book will motivate beginning students to understand econometrics, with an appreciation of its strengths and limits."—Gary Chamberlain, Harvard University In terms of the chapters itself, I think they are very topical and will cover a lot of the modern research; the book pulls away from a fundamental issue - no matter what the methods are, the thought of comparison and counterfactuals is not emphasized enough I feel. Consider a standard econometrics textbook - say Wooldridge - it actually draws a framework where you know - no matter what the empirical problem is, you need to think in terms of identification, endogeneity and the underlying logic of counter-factuals. They certainly bring in a lot of that - where they talk about apples-to-apples comparison; but the emphasis is not approached as a general method of empirical analysis and the book can go far if that is emphasized. Thus in terms of binding the various methods - (a) a comparison and (b) a generalized empirical strategy might help get the econometrics logic through to a wider audience. Admitting that the academic way keeps the writing clean, but then it also makes the reader lose interest. The snippets are like the buzz generators - they are the interest makers - and this book could have gone a long long way in making 'Metrics fun!.

Few fields of statistical inquiry have seen faster progress over the last several decades than causal inference. With an engaging, insightful style, Angrist and Pischke catch readers up on five powerful methods in this area. If you seek to make causal inferences, or understand those made by others, you will want to read this book as soon as possible."—Gary King, Harvard University

Modern econometrics is more than just a set of statistical tools—causal inference in the social sciences requires a careful, inquisitive mindset. Mastering 'Metrics is an engaging, fun, and highly accessible guide to the paradigm of causal inference."—David Deming, Harvard University Written by true 'masters of 'metrics,' this book is perfect for those who wish to study this important subject. Using real-world examples and only elementary statistics, Angrist and Pischke convey the central methods of causal inference with clarity and wit."—Hal Varian, chief economist at Google

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