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This module leads the advanced undergraduate student through the process of replicating the econometrics in a published study.

Replication

Introduction

One of the most important first steps in a science experiment is to replicate the results of earlier research. For a variety of reasons (most of them practical and not theoretically sound) economists generally do not undertake this step; what they tend to do is report the results of earlier papers and then compare their results with the earlier results without asking the question of whether these earlier results were reported accurately. Omitting this step in a world of honest careful researchers might seem to be a minor problem. However, there is enough casual evidence to suggest that a large portion of the econometric results reported in the journals cannot be replicated because the original researcher (1) does not have the data set used in the research because it has been lost for a variety of reasons, (2) cannot share the data set because it is proprietory, (3) is unwilling to share the data set because there are other issues they wish to investigate using the data set, or (4) just are unwilling to share the data set. For this reason much of the published econometrics research has never been replicated. In recognization of this problem several journals like the Journal of Applied Econometrics now require that authors submit the data set they used to the journal to be posted on the web for use by any other researcher. Whether this effort has been successful will not be clear unless someone undertakes to replicate the work in this journal to see if all of the data necessary to replicate an article have been posted and if the regressions included in the article actually can be replicated. It is very unlikely anyone would undertake such an effort given the fact that no journal will publish results that are merely a replication of previously published articles.

In this module we explore some of the difficulties that exist in replicating existing research by undertaking to replicate some of the results reported in the Butler, Finegan, and Siegfried (1998) (BFS, hereafter) article analyzing the effect of a student's calculus background on the grade he or she earns in intermediate microeconomics or in intermediate macroeconomics. Butler, J. S., T. Aldrich Finegan, and John J. Siegfried (1998). Does more calculus improve student learning in Intermediate Micro- and Macroeconomic Theory? Journal of Applied Econometrics 13 (2):185-202. The goal of this module is to (1) help students to learn how to read in detail an article that appears in a typical economics trade journal, (2) introduce them to ordered probit, an advanced econometrics tool, and (3) teach them how to present and discuss the results of an estimation of a model in an economics paper. While most of the discussion in this module focuses on using Stata in this replication, one can use most any econometrics program they are comfortable with to replicate some of the results reported in the BFS article.

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Source:  OpenStax, Econometrics for honors students. OpenStax CNX. Jul 20, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11208/1.2
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