Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 1.5 hours per session

Recitations: 1 session / week 1.5 hours per session

Prerequisites

14.382 Econometrics or permission of the instructor.

Goals

The main objective of this course is to develop the skills needed to do empirical research in fields operating with time series data sets. The course aims to provide students with techniques and receipts for estimation and assessment of quality of economic models with time series data. Special attention will be placed on limitations and pitfalls of different methods and their potential fixes. The course will also emphasize recent developments in Time Series Analysis and will present some open questions and areas of ongoing research.

Grading

ACTIVITIES PERCENTAGES
5 problems sets 60
Take-home final exam 40

If you are an Economics PhD student, your econometrics paper requirement could be fulfilled by turning in a research paper on a topic related to material covered in the class. The paper should be empirical.

Textbooks and Readings

Required

Buy at Amazon Hamilton, James D. Time Series Analysis. Princeton University Press, 1994. ISBN: 9780691042893.

The primary text is Hamilton (1994), which is somewhat outdated. A fantastic reference on the current state of the field is the method lectures "What's New in Econometrics-Time Series" delivered by James H. Stock and Mark W. Watson during NBER Summer Institute 2008. Most of the readings for the later parts of the course are journal articles. The course overviews a large literature, so not all topics are treated in the same depth, and only a few references listed under a topic will be covered. The other papers are additional references for those who wish to study specific topics in greater detail. The lectures will be self-contained.

Acknowledgement

I am extremely grateful to Jim Stock (Harvard), Rustam Ibragimov (Harvard), Frank Schorfheide (UPenn) and Barbara Rossi (Duke) for their advice and permission to use their course materials.

The Last but not the Least

Your feedback is highly valuable. Please, speak up if you have suggestions on how the course can be improved.