Methodology and tacit knowledge : two experiments in econometrics
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Bibliographic Information
Methodology and tacit knowledge : two experiments in econometrics
John Wiley, 1999
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Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
"Econometrics textbooks see their subject as a set of techniques; Magnus and Morgan see it as a set of practices. A combination of controlled experiment and anthropology of science, Methodology and Tacit Knowledge gives a rare inside view of how econometricians work, why econometrics is an art and not a set of simple recipes, and why, like all artists, econometricians differ in their techniques and finished works. This is economic methodology at its best." Kevin Hoover, University of California, Davis
"The tacit knowledge experiment was a highly commendable initiative. Its exploration of the theme of how knowledge is acquired and used in applied econometrics is unique and produced some fascinating insights into this process." Adrian Pagan, Australian National University
"It is rare, perhaps unique, to find leading empirical economists face the prospect of modelling the same phenomena, with the same data within the same limited time frame. A valuable and illuminating experiment in comparative research methodologies, made all the more provocative when compared to the excellent original study by Tobin." Richard Blundell, University College London
This book will be of considerable interest to economists and to econometricians concerned about the methodology of their own discipline, and will provide valuable material for researchers in science studies and for teachers of econometrics.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Applied Econometrics and Design of Two Experiments (J. Magnus & M. Morgan).
THE FIELD TRIAL EXPERIMENT.
Organization of the Field Trial Experiment (J. Magnus & M. Morgan).
A Statistical Demand Function for Food in the USA (J. Tobin).
On the Correspondence Between Individual and Aggregate Food Consumption Functions: Evidence from the USA and the Netherlands (H. Anderson & F. Vahid).
The Demand for Food in the United States and the Netherlands: A Systems Approach with the CBS Model (H. van Driel, et al.).
Revisiting Tobin's 1950 Study of Food Expenditure (E. Leamer).
Empirical Econometric Modelling of Food Consumption Using a New Informational Complexity Approach (P. Bearse, et al.).
A Comparative Study of Modelling the Demand for Food in the United States and the Netherlands (H. Song, et al.).
Statistical Demand Functions for Food in the USA and the Netherlands (D. de Crombrugghe, et al.).
The Dynamics and Statics of Food Consumption: Tobin Revisited (R. Hoglung, et al.).
Tobin's Study on the Demand of Food in the US Revisited: An Examination of the Issue of Pooling Information from Budget Studies and Time Series (G. Maddala, et al.).
My 1950 Food Demand Study in Retrospect (J. Tobin).
Comparative Assessments of the Field Trial Experiment (A. Barten, et al.).
Analysis of the Field Trial Experiment (J. Magnus & W. Siegert).
Lessons from the Field Trial Experiment (J. Magnus & M. Morgan).
THE TACIT KNOWLEDGE EXPERIMENT.
Organization of the Tacit Knowledge Experiment (J. Magnus & M. Morgan).
An Application of Three Econometric Methodologies to the Estimation of the Income Elasticity of Food Demand (W. Siegert).
An Econometric Analysis of US Food Expenditure, 1931-1989 (D. Hendry).
Is this How I Look? (E. Leamer).
The Tilburg Experiments: Impressions of a Drop-Out (A. Pagan).
Lessons from the Tacit Knowledge Experiment (J. Magnus & M. Morgan).
THE DATA.
Description of the US Data (J. Magnus & M. Morgan).
Description of the Dutch Data (J. Magnus & M. Morgan).
by "Nielsen BookData"