14 Economics

14.1 Analyzing Financial and Economic Data with R

by Marcelo S. Perlin

Not surprisingly, fields with abundant access to data and practical applications, such as economics and finance, it is expected that a graduate student or a data analyst has learned at least one programming language that allows him/her to do his work efficiently. Learning how to program is becoming a requisite for the job market.

Link: https://www.msperlin.com/afedR/

Physical copy: https://amzn.to/3RBjXhN

14.2 Applied Microeconometrics with R

by Achim Zeileis, Christian Kleiber

This project will gradually turn the course materials for the “Econometrics and Statistics: Microeconometrics” course at Universität Innsbruck into an online book.

The topics covered roughly follow the book Analysis of Microdata by Winkelmann & Boes (2009, Springer-Verlag) and encompass: models for categorical responses (binary, multinomial, ordered), count data, limited dependent variables, and duration models.

Link: https://discdown.org/microeconometrics/

14.3 Data Science for Economists and Other Animals

by Grant McDermott

Introduce Economics graduate students to the modern data science toolkit

Link: https://grantmcdermott.com/ds4e/

14.4 Financial Econometrics - R Tutorial Guidance

by Yizhi Wang, Samuel Vigne

This is an R tutorial book for Financial Econometrics in PDF format.

Link: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3863563

14.5 Introduction to Econometrics with R

by Florian Oswald, Vincent Viers, Jean-Marc Robin, Pierre Villedieu, Gustave Kenedi

Welcome to Introductory Econometrics for 2nd year undergraduates at ScPo! On this page we outline the course and present the Syllabus. 2018/2019 was the first time that we taught this course in this format, so we are in year 3 now.

Link: https://scpoecon.github.io/ScPoEconometrics

14.6 Introduction to R for Econometrics

by Kieran Marray

This is a short introduction to R to go with the first year econometrics courses at the Tinbergen Institute. It is aimed at people who are relatively new to R, or programming in general. The goal is to give you enough of knowledge of the fundamentals of R to write and adapt code to fit econometric models to data, and to simulate your own data, working alone or with others. You will be able to: read data from csv files, plot it, manipulate it into the form you want, use sets of functions others have built (packages), write your own functions to compute estimators, simulate data to test the performance of estimators, and present the results in a nice format.

Most importantly, when things inevitably go wrong, you will be able to begin to interpret error messages and adapt others’ solutions to fit your needs.

Link: https://bookdown.org/kieranmarray/intro_to_r_for_econometrics

14.7 Learning Microeconometrics with R

by Christopher P. Adams

This book provides an introduction to the field of microeconometrics through the use of R. The focus is on applying current learning from the field to real world problems. It uses R to both teach the concepts of the field and show the reader how the techniques can be used. It is aimed at the general reader with the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree in economics, statistics or some more technical field. It covers the standard tools of microeconometrics, OLS, instrumental variables, Heckman selection and difference in difference. In addition, it introduces bounds, factor models, mixture models and empirical Bayesian analysis.

Paid: $100

Link: https://www.routledge.com/Learning-Microeconometrics-with-R/Adams/p/book/9780367255381

14.8 Principles of Econometrics with R

by Constantin Colonescu

R supplementary resource for the “Principles of Econometrics” textbook by Carter Hill, William Griffiths and Guay Lim, 4-th edition

Link: https://bookdown.org/ccolonescu/RPoE4

14.9 R Companion to Real Econometrics

by Tony Carilli

The intended audience for this book is anyone making using of Real Econometrics: The Right Tools to Answer Important Questions 2nd ed. by Michael Bailey who would like to learn to use R, RStudio, and the tidyverse to complete empirical examples from the text. This book will be useful to anyone wishing to integrate R and the Tidyverse into an econometrics course.

Link: https://bookdown.org/carillitony/bailey

14.10 R for Economic Research

by J. Renato Leripio

Over the past years I’ve received a lot of messages asking what I considered to be the most important subjects one should learn in order to start a career in economic research. R for Economic Research is my contribution to those who have some knowledge of R programming but still lack the necessary tools to carry out professional economic analysis. This is an intermediate-level book where the reader will find shortcuts to start working on a variety of tasks and also valuable references to delve into the details of more complex topics.

Link: https://book.rleripio.com/

14.11 R Guide to Accompany Introductory Econometrics for Finance

by Robert Wichmann, Chris Brooks

This free software guide for R with freely downloadable datasets brings the econometric techniques to life, showing readers how to implement the approaches presented in Introductory Econometrics for Finance using this highly popular software package. Designed to be used alongside the main textbook, the guide will give readers the confidence and skills to estimate and interpret their own models while the textbook will ensure that they have a thorough understanding of the conceptual underpinnings.

Link: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3466882

14.12 Using R for Introductory Econometrics

by Florian Heiss

An R book supplement to the Wooldridge’s “Introductory Econometrics” textbook

Link: http://www.urfie.net

 

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