Estimation and Inference in Econometrics
Author: Russell Davidson, James G. MacKinnon
List Price: $65.00
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ISBN: 0195060113
Publisher: Oxford University Press (January, 1993)
Sales Rank: 84,347
Average Customer Rating: 4 out of 5
Customer Reviews
Rating: 4 out of 5
This is the book!
I do not know better book on nonlinear estimation and inference in econometrics.Overall the book is very well written and relatively easy to understand, considering its subject. However, if you have not been introduced to linear econometrics, the book can become very hard, mainly if the reader is not acquainted with matrix algebra.
The first chapter on the geometrics of regression is simply marvelous, although a better picture is in Ruud's.
The style is someway formal, but different from the traditional lemma-theorem-proof-corollary way. This makes the book easier to read.
Future improvements include:
a. More examples (please);
b. Make the early 2 chapters on asymptotics clearer;
c. Extend the GMM approach interconnecting it with other chapters (it's more general);
d. Put exercises, with solutions, with selected solutions, whatever, but exercises, including computational ones;
e. Some economics - this does not mean applications per se, but it means to explain where and why such techniques are necessary in the real world.
Rating: 5 out of 5
Much Better Than Green's In Terms of Quality and Price.
Green's textbook was the assigned text when I took my econometrics sequence. Like many others, I found it not well written and the explanations are pretty bad. Also, Green's is priced sky-high (around $100 for a brand new copy). Davidson and MacKinnon is different. Both expositions and explanations are clear and easy to follow. I was so delighted after picking up a copy from the libarary. This is the one econometrics students should have. The price is also hard to beat. The reason I think it is not widely adopted is because of the geometric analysis of regression (Chapter 2). But if you don't like geometrics, you can simply skip it.
An improved version of this book is just published under the new title "Econometric Theory and Methods". This new version contains a chapter on unit-root and cointegration, as well as some new numerical methods. I urge interested buyers to take a look at the new version.
Rating: 5 out of 5
No one like this
It's a nice piece of work.
There is no one like this.
The only problem is the way the contents are presented. There is no a logical order that help us in a course. I agree that there is not a clear structured inside the chapters or in the entire work. But this is the book that reach the deepest point being readable. Another books are better structured or more intutive but too superficial or old-fashioned.
With the modern computers and software the old classical books based on small sample theory are unsuitable. Davidson and MacKinnon point us to the econometry of the future.
It would be a good idea to combine this book with Berndt's one on applied econometrics, plus a good software like Stata 8 or matrix-based programming software like MATLAB.
That's the best way to access the econometry. Similar Products
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