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Rating: Summary: Excellent on intuition and good preparation for Greene Review: Instills understanding by slowly going through derivations and principles, while at the same time motivating econometric analysis by referring to economic situations where it can be used. Much better than Gujarati (which tends to be a "cookery book" rather than giving an integrated treatment).The only weakness of the book is that it focusses almost exclusively on estimation under the assumption that error terms are identicallly and independently distributed (iid). However, all other undergraduate econometric textbooks (and a lot of graduate ones too!) display this preoccupation, so Griffiths et al are no worse than their rivals. An update to this book would also be good, as it's nearly 10 years old now. However, its good points far outweigh these weaknesses.
Rating: Summary: The best undergraduate econometrics book Review: Instills understanding by slowly going through derivations and principles, while at the same time motivating econometric analysis by referring to economic situations where it can be used. Much better than Gujarati (which tends to be a "cookery book" rather than giving an integrated treatment). The only weakness of the book is that it focusses almost exclusively on estimation under the assumption that error terms are identicallly and independently distributed (iid). However, all other undergraduate econometric textbooks (and a lot of graduate ones too!) display this preoccupation, so Griffiths et al are no worse than their rivals. An update to this book would also be good, as it's nearly 10 years old now. However, its good points far outweigh these weaknesses.
Rating: Summary: Good applied econometrics for undergraduates Review: This book is excellent for beginners in econometrics. It is particuarly useful for people not wanting to know all the mathematics ( algebra and matrix approach) behind econometrics. Students doing term papers find it very practical as they want to know how to go from theoretical econometrics to empirical econometrics.
Rating: Summary: Excellent on intuition and good preparation for Greene Review: This book is very good at giving brand new students of econometrics the intuition behind concepts. At the same time, it does not ignore the mathematics (calculus and linear algebra) and thus it is a good preparation for Greene. One thing I don't like about this book is notation. For example, the book refers to the mean as beta instead of mu. I do prefer Gujarati's notation much better. It would also be very nice to have an update of this great textbook since it was written in 1993. Thank you,
Rating: Summary: The Perfect Bridge to Greene Review: This is a great beginner's textbook. Whereas some, like Greene, are going to be too hard for some beginners, and others like Gujarati are far too basic, this book strikes an excellent balance. It's best feature is all the worked examples is gives you, including the raw data used, allowing you to enter the data into a statistical package and make sure you get the same result. This is a great confidence builder!
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