Econometrics

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McGraw-Hill, 1977 - Business & Economics - 516 pages
The main purpose of this volume of the Handbook of Statistics is to serve as a source, reference, and teaching supplement in econometrics, the branch of economics concerned with statistical methods applied to the empirical study of economic relationships. The papers in the volume provide comprehensive and up-to-date surveys of recent developments in semi-parametric and non-parametric estimation, limited dependent variable models, time series analysis, alternatives to likelihood methods, and computer-intensive methods in econometrics. They are written at a level intended for use by professional econometricians and statisticians, as well as advanced graduate students in econometrics. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

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Contents

INTRODUCTION TO PROBABILITY
9
Chapter 3
21
Chapter 4
36
Copyright

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About the author (1977)

G. S. Maddala is a University Eminent Professor of Economics at Ohio State University. He attended Andhra University, Bombay University and the University of Chicago. Maddala taught at the University of Florida, the University of Rochester, Stanford University, and Cornell University. He contributed to The Handbook of Econometrics and authored Introduction of Econometrics.

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