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Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

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Page 1: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Econometrics

Session 1 – Introduction

Amine Ouazad,Asst. Prof. of Economics

Page 2: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

PRELIMINARIESSession 1 - Introduction

Page 3: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Introduction

• Who I am• Arbitrage• Textbook• Grading• Homework• Implementation

Session 1• The two econometric problems• Randomization as the Golden Benchmark

Outline of the Course

Page 4: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Who I am• Applied empirical economist.• Work on urban economics, economics of

education, applied econometrics in accounting.

• Emphasis on the identification of causal effects.

• Careful empirical work: clean data work, correct identification of causal effects.

• Large datasets:– +100 million observations, administrative

datasets, geographic information software.

• Implementation of econometric procedures in Stata/Mata.

Page 5: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Trade-offs• Classroom is heterogeneous.– In tastes, mathematics level, needs, prior

knowledge.

• Different fields have different habits.– E.g. “endogeneity” is not an issue/the same

issue in OB, Finance, Strategy, or TOM.

• Conclusion:– Course provides a particular spin on

econometrics, with mathematics when needed, applications.

• This is a difficult course, even for students with a prior course in econometrics.

Page 6: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Textbooks

• *William H. Greene, Econometrics, 6th edition.

• Jeffrey Wooldridge, Econometrics of Cross Section and Panel Data.

• Joshua Angrist and Jorn Steffen Pischke, Mostly Harmless Econometrics.

• Applied Econometrics using Stata, Cameron et al.

Page 7: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Prerequisites• I assume you know:– Statistics• Random variables.• Moments of random variables (mean,

variance, kurtosis, skewness).• Probabilities.

– Real analysis• Integral of functions, derivatives.• Convergence of a function at x or at infinity.

–Matrix algebra • Inverse, multiplication, projections.

Page 8: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Grading

• Exam: 60%

• Participation: 10%

• Homework: 30%

– One problem set in-between Econometrics A and B.

Page 9: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Implementation

• STATA version 12.– License for PhD students. Ask IT. 5555 or

Alina Jacquet.– Interactive mode, Do files, Mata

programming.– Compulsory for this course.

• MATLAB, not for everybody.– Coding econometric procedures

yourself, e.g. GMM.

Page 10: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Outline for Session 1Introduction

1. Correlation and Causation

2. The Two Econometric Problems

3. Treatment Effects

Page 11: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

1. CORRELATION AND CAUSATION

Session 1 - Introduction

Page 12: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics
Page 13: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

1. The perils of confoundingcorrelation and causation

• How can we boost children’s reading scores?– Shoe size is correlated with IQ.

• Women earn less than men.– Sign of discrimination?

• Health is negatively correlated with the number of days spent in hospital.– Do hospitals kill patients?

Page 14: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics
Page 15: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Potential outcomes framework

• A.k.a the “Rubin causality model”.• Outcome with the treatment Y(1),

outcome without the treatment Y(0).• Treatment status D=0,1.• FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEM OF

ECONOMETRICS: Either Y(1) or Y(0) is observed, or, equivalently, Y=Y(1) D + Y(0) (1-D) is observed.

• What would have happened if a given subject had received a different treatment?

Page 16: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Naïve estimator of the treatment effect

• D=E(Y|D=1) – E(Y|D=0).• Does that identify any relevant

parameter?

• Notice that:– D= E(Y|D=1) – E(Y|D=0)

= E(Y(1)|D=1)-E(Y(0)|D=0)

• What are we looking for?

Page 17: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Ignorable Treatment (Rubin 1983)

• Assume Y(1),Y(0) D.

• Then E(Y(0)|D=1)=E(Y(0)|D=0)=E(Y(0)).

• Similarly for Y(1).• Then:

Page 18: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Another Interpretation

• Assume Y(D)=a+bD+e.• e is the “unobservables”.• The naïve estimator D=b+E(e|D=1)-

E(e|D=0).• Selection bias: S=E(e|D=1)-E(e|

D=0).– Overestimates the effect if S>0– Underestimates the effect if S<0.

Page 19: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Definitions

• Treatment Effect.Y(1)-Y(0)

• Average Treatment Effect.E(Y(1)-Y(0))

• Average Treatment on the Treated.E(Y(1)-Y(0)|D=1)

• Average Treatment on the Untreated.E(Y(1)-Y(0)|D=0)

Page 20: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Randomizationas the Golden Benchmark

• Effect of a medical treatment.– Treatment and control group.– Randomization of the assignment to the

treatment and to the control.

• Why randomize?

• … effect of jumping without a parachute on the probability of death.

Page 21: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

With ignorability…

• If the treatment is ignorable (e.g. if the treatment has been randomly assigned to subjects) then– ATE = ATT = ATU

Page 22: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Selection bias

• Why is there a selection bias?– In medecine, in economics, in

management?

1. Self-selection of subjects into the treatment.

2. Correlation between unobservables and observables, e.g. industry, gender, income.

Page 23: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

2. THE TWO ECONOMETRIC PROBLEMS

Session 1 - Introduction

Page 24: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

2. The Two Econometric Problems

• Identification and Inference– “Studies of identification seek to

characterize the conclusions that could be drawn if one could use the sampling process to obtain an unlimited number of observations.”

– “Studies of statistical inference seek to characterize the generally weaker conclusions that can be drawn from a finite number of observations.”

Page 25: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Identification vs inference

• Consider a survey of a random subset of 1,302 French individuals.

• Identification:– Can you identify the average income in

France?

• Inference:– How close to the true average income is the

mean income in the sample?– i.e. what is the confidence interval around the

estimate of the average income in Singapore?

Page 26: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Identification vs inference

• Consider a lab experiment with 9 rats, randomly assigned to a treatment group and a control group.

• Identification:– Can you identify the effect of the

medication on the rats using the random assignment?

• Inference:–With 9 rats, can you say anything about

the effectiveness of the medication?

Page 27: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

This session

• This session has focused on identification.– i.e. I assume we have a potentially

infinite dataset.– I focus on the conditions for the

identification of the causal effect of a variable.

• Next session: what problems appear because we have a limited number of observations?

Page 28: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

LOOKING FORWARD:OUTLINE OF THE COURSE

Session 1 - Introduction

Page 29: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

Outline of the course

1. Introduction: Identification

2. Introduction: Inference

3. Linear Regression

4. Identification Issues in Linear Regressions

5. Inference Issues in Linear Regressions

Page 30: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

6. Identification in Simultaneous Equation Models

7. Instrumental variable (IV) estimation

8. Finding IVs: Identification strategies

9. Panel data analysis

Page 31: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

10.Bootstrap

11.Generalized Method of Moments (GMM)

12.GMM: Dynamic Panel Data estimation

13.Maximum Likelihood (ML): Introduction

14.ML: Probit and Logit

Page 32: Econometrics Session 1 – Introduction Amine Ouazad, Asst. Prof. of Economics

15.ML: Heckman selection models

16.ML: Truncation and censoring

+ Exercise/Review session

+ Exam