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introductory statistics (for economists) lecture 1

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typed out notes detailing key information from introductory statistics for economists lecture 1. key words and definitions, concepts, equations included

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Uploaded on
March 27, 2023
Number of pages
2
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Diego ruiz
Contains
Lecture 1

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Intro to statistics

Lecture 1

Composed of 3 main facets

1. Design – how to collect data
2. Description – describing visual of data & summarizing
3. Inference – make predictions about wider world & future

Variables

Continuous - (interval) - measured on continuous scale eg income, height

Categorical (discrete) - information, distinct categories eg ethnicity

Within categorical – nominal – no order to categories eg ethnicity

And ordinal – implicit order eg education – gcse, a level , degree

Count – eg number of cars

Continuous variables

- Theoretically infinite number of outcomes
- Meaningful to do arithmetic with
- Can be meaningfully subdivided indefinitely eg age intervals

Categorical variables

- Values taken are category codes
- Not ‘real’ numbers and cant do arithmetic
- Not necessarily numerical but can be
- Ordinal – there exists a logical ordering/ranking of categories – note; magnitude between categories not
always meaningful
- Nominal – no obvious order/ranking eg country of birth – can have extrinsic vs intrinsic ordering

Count variables

- Have characteristics of ordinal and continuous data
- Has natural order
- Difference between categories is meaningful, can do basic arithmetic with values

Data types

Aggregation level

- Micro level – usually collect data at micro level (smallest possible unit)
- Macro / aggregated form – summed over a number of smaller units
- At more advanced levels aggregation may cause methodological problems

Dimension of data collection

- Cross section data – different entities observed at one point in time eg different exchange rates all measured
at different times
- Time series data – same entity observed at different points in time
- Panel data – combination of cross section and time series, number of entities observed over time

Time series data

Growth rate = (new – old)/old * 100

Gives a percentage
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