Time Series and Dynamic Models (Themes in Modern Econometrics) While it does demand a good quantitative grounding, it does not require a high mathematical rigor or a deep knowledge of economics. The authors provide a sound analysis of the statistical origins of
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| Title | : | Time Series and Dynamic Models (Themes in Modern Econometrics) |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.74 (242 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0521423082 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 688 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 1997-01-13 |
| Genre | : |
Editorial : "If I wanted to give a good overview of the field to students who already had a course on ARIMA models and some state-space theory, then I would use Time Series and Dynamic Models." Kent D. Wall, JASA
"This book is well organized and provides many insights into time series and dynamic modelsis book should be a useful resource not only for the econometrician but also for the person with no background in econometrics who is interested in the general theory of time series." Errol Caby, Technometrics
"In my opinion, it is the best general text on time series analysis available. It is a masterpiece. Organization is impeccable. Results flow seamlessly from one to the next. The writing, for the most part, is very accessible. It nicely balances mathematical formality with a hands-on, tone that tells you what is "really going on."
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Concisely written and up-to-date, this book provides a unified and comprehensive analysis of the full range of topics that comprise modern time series econometrics. While it does demand a good quantitative grounding, it does not require a high mathematical rigor or a deep knowledge of economics. One of the book's most attractive features is the close attention it pays throughout to economic models and phenomena. The authors provide a sound analysis of the statistical origins of topics such as seasonal adjustment, causality, exogeneity, cointegration, prediction, and forecasting. Their treatment of Box-Jenkins models and the Kalman filter represents a synthesis of the most recent theoretical and applied work in these areas.
It is enertaining, and captures every emotion known to men and women. When I finally figured it out, I realized I did like the book, just not in the way I wanted to, but rather in a better way (which is why it made me think).
The main character, Barry, is the villain of the story. Again, like the "First Tom Holt Omnibus," the first story, Expecting Someone Taller, is very good. The pages are mainly blank with some Chinese phrases encased in a black margin boxes and the absolute minimum of explanatory English text, little more than a rough translation, of selected Chinese phrases from the readings in Volume 1.
The explanations are the barest possible, a kind of outline listing "Sentence Structure", "Adjunct Statement", "Third Unit of Meaning" etc. I also feel that his deep affection for the land, for his home in the woods, connects us with the place that all of us need to be; the place where we are truly ourselves. I use it almost at every class.. It was too expens
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