Jeffrey M. Wooldridge’s Introduction to Econometrics shows how econometrics is a useful tool for answering questions in business, policy evaluation and forecasting environments. Packed with timely, relevant applications, the text incorporates close to 100 intriguing data sets, available in six formats, with appendices and questions available online.
This edition's practical, yet professional, approach demonstrates how econometrics has moved beyond a set of abstract tools to become genuinely useful for answering questions across a variety of disciplines.
This is a textbook for the standard undergraduate econometrics course.
This makes the material easier to understand and, ultimately, leads to better econometric practices. Packed with timely, relevant applications, the book introduces the latest emerging developments in the field.
This best-selling textbook addresses the need for an introduction to econometrics specifically written for finance students.
"This book does not attempt to provide a self-contained discussion of econometric models and methods.
This accessible textbook and supporting web site use Excel (R) to teach introductory econometrics.
This book insists on rigor when it is essential, but it emphasizes intuition and seizes upon entertainment wherever possible. Introductory Econometrics is motivated by three beliefs.
The text's unique approach reflects how econometric instruction has evolved from simply describing a set of abstract recipes to showing how econometrics can be used to empirically study questions across a variety of disciplines.
This book provides a rigorous introduction to the principles of econometrics and gives students and practitioners the tools they need to effectively and accurately analyze real data.
Wooldridge uses a systematic approach motivated by the major problems facing applied researchers. This text provides important understanding for empirical work in many social sciences, as well as for carrying out research projects.