Econ 6243 Page
This page provides links to all important information available on
this web site for those enrolled in my Econ 6243 sections this spring.
Office Hours
Wednesday 9:40-12:30 and by appointment.
News
Syllabus
Homework
Go to UCLA
ATS and view the 'entering data movie' in the class
notes section. This movie lasts about half an hour. This will be
helpful especially if you are new to SAS.
- Loading data into SAS.Go to Verbeek's website at Verbeek's data sets. Save the compressed .zip file for wages in the USA to your computer. Unzip the files and load the wages file into SAS. Note, the proper file is "wages1.dat". It is an ascii file. The others are in either STATA or EViews format (which SAS won't read). Using Proc Print or the data browser, verify that the dataset is read into SAS properly.
- Exercises 7.1-7.3 in ETM. The earnings data in .csv format: earnings.data from ETM.
- Exercise 6.4 in ETM.
- Exercise 6.10 in ETM.
- Exercises 7.14-7.15 in ETM.
- Read Panel Data Primer from NYU.
Data Sets
Below you will find some general links to data sets used by Davidson
& MacKinnon, Wooldridge, and Verbeek. If I make specific
assignments using a particular dataset, I'll try to post a link to
it here.
Links to other stuff
- ETM Textbook Website This site is
maintained by the James MacKinnon, one of the authors of
Econometric Theory and Methods (ETM). It includes Errata, data
sets, and answers to some of the problems in the book. In fact, Here. is the link to
their data sets. These are in ASCII format and will have to be
imported as unformatted ascii data into
SAS or STATA.
-
Jeffrey Wooldridge textbook site
- Verbeek's website
- Panel Data Primer from NYU.
- Latex and
related links. Here you will find some links to sites that will
help you get started with LaTex, if you are so inclined. If you are
just getting started using TeX the go first to Getting Started. LaTex
(pronounced Lay-Tek) is actually a package that makes TeX
(pronounced Tek) much easier to use. According to the Tex User
Group FAQ "TeX ix a typesetting system written by Donald E.
Knuth, who says in the Preface to his book on TeX (see books about
TeX) that it is 'intended for the creation of beautiful books -
and especially for books that contain a lot of
mathematics'." If you ever plan on writing professional
looking papers or books (dissertations)
then I highly recommend that you learn to use this system. For
example, your textbook was typeset by the authors using TeX.
- Conditional logit output from Limdep CLOGIT.txt, multinomial logit output from STATA mnlogit.txt, and ordered probit from STATA oprobit.txt.
On Reserve
I have asked that three books be placed on reserve in Edmon Low
Library. These are Estimation and Inference by Davidson and
MacKinnon, A Guide to Econometrics by Peter Kennedy, and
The Introduction to the Theory and Practice of Econometrics
by Judge et al. Once they have made their way to the reserve desk you
may go to the main library reserve on the first floor of the library
and check them out for 1 day.
Want STATA?
Want SAS?
Ask your department's unit assistant or your department head.
Learning SAS
- Links to
online documentation for SAS version 9.
- SAS Class notes from UCLA
Academmic Technology services. This is a great site with a
wealth of information about SAS and other statistical software.
Follow the links and you will find some movies about various
aspects of SAS.
- Official
SAS documentation from the SAS Corporation's documents
online.
- Also from the SAS document site is the 2400+ page
ETS Manual in .pdf format. This file is big, but if you do
econometrics with SAS, you'll want to consult this manual for
the details of estimation as well as for specific commands you may
need.
- Also from the SAS document site is the 1000+ page
IML Manual in .pdf format.
SAS Examples
- Reading data into SAS: U.S. Gasoline Market data. Example 1
- Sample least squares IML program: U.S. Gasoline Market data. Example 2
- Sample least squares IML program: U.S. Gasoline Market data. Example 3
- Here is the data set that goes with these examples: Data. This is in a comma separated value format.
- This is the example from the October 6 class. Sas program. The .csv file that contains the data is here.
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Page last modified Monday, October 19, 2005.