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book Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge cover

Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge

Edition 4ISBN: 978-0324660609
book Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge cover

Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge

Edition 4ISBN: 978-0324660609
Exercise 12
Use the data in SMOKE.RAW for this exercise.
(i) The variable cigs is the number of cigarettes smoked per day. How many people in the sample do not smoke at all What fraction of people claim to smoke 20 cigarettes a day Why do you think there is a pileup of people at 20 cigarettes
(ii) Given your answers to part (i), does cigs seem a good candidate for having a conditional Poisson distribution
(iii) Estimate a Poisson regression model for cigs, including log(cigpric), log(income), white, educ, age, and age2 as explanatory variables. What are the estimated price and income elasticities
(iv) Using the maximum likelihood standard errors, are the price and income variables statistically significant at the 5% level
(v) Obtain the estimate of Use the data in SMOKE.RAW for this exercise. (i) The variable cigs is the number of cigarettes smoked per day. How many people in the sample do not smoke at all What fraction of people claim to smoke 20 cigarettes a day Why do you think there is a pileup of people at 20 cigarettes  (ii) Given your answers to part (i), does cigs seem a good candidate for having a conditional Poisson distribution  (iii) Estimate a Poisson regression model for cigs, including log(cigpric), log(income), white, educ, age, and age2 as explanatory variables. What are the estimated price and income elasticities  (iv) Using the maximum likelihood standard errors, are the price and income variables statistically significant at the 5% level  (v) Obtain the estimate of   described after equation. What is   How should you adjust the standard errors from part (iv)    (vi) Using the adjusted standard errors from part (v), are the price and income elasticities now statistically different from zero Explain. (vii) Are the education and age variables significant using the more robust standard errors How do you interpret the coefficient on educ  (viii) Obtain the fitted values,   , from the Poisson regression model. Find the minimum and maximum values and discuss how well the exponential model predicts heavy cigarette smoking. (ix) Using the fitted values from part (viii), obtain the squared correlation coefficient between   and yi. (x) Estimate a linear model for cigs by OLS, using the explanatory variables (and same functional forms) as in part (iii). Does the linear model or exponential model provide a better fit Is either R-squared very large described after equation. What is Use the data in SMOKE.RAW for this exercise. (i) The variable cigs is the number of cigarettes smoked per day. How many people in the sample do not smoke at all What fraction of people claim to smoke 20 cigarettes a day Why do you think there is a pileup of people at 20 cigarettes  (ii) Given your answers to part (i), does cigs seem a good candidate for having a conditional Poisson distribution  (iii) Estimate a Poisson regression model for cigs, including log(cigpric), log(income), white, educ, age, and age2 as explanatory variables. What are the estimated price and income elasticities  (iv) Using the maximum likelihood standard errors, are the price and income variables statistically significant at the 5% level  (v) Obtain the estimate of   described after equation. What is   How should you adjust the standard errors from part (iv)    (vi) Using the adjusted standard errors from part (v), are the price and income elasticities now statistically different from zero Explain. (vii) Are the education and age variables significant using the more robust standard errors How do you interpret the coefficient on educ  (viii) Obtain the fitted values,   , from the Poisson regression model. Find the minimum and maximum values and discuss how well the exponential model predicts heavy cigarette smoking. (ix) Using the fitted values from part (viii), obtain the squared correlation coefficient between   and yi. (x) Estimate a linear model for cigs by OLS, using the explanatory variables (and same functional forms) as in part (iii). Does the linear model or exponential model provide a better fit Is either R-squared very large How should you adjust the standard errors from part (iv) Use the data in SMOKE.RAW for this exercise. (i) The variable cigs is the number of cigarettes smoked per day. How many people in the sample do not smoke at all What fraction of people claim to smoke 20 cigarettes a day Why do you think there is a pileup of people at 20 cigarettes  (ii) Given your answers to part (i), does cigs seem a good candidate for having a conditional Poisson distribution  (iii) Estimate a Poisson regression model for cigs, including log(cigpric), log(income), white, educ, age, and age2 as explanatory variables. What are the estimated price and income elasticities  (iv) Using the maximum likelihood standard errors, are the price and income variables statistically significant at the 5% level  (v) Obtain the estimate of   described after equation. What is   How should you adjust the standard errors from part (iv)    (vi) Using the adjusted standard errors from part (v), are the price and income elasticities now statistically different from zero Explain. (vii) Are the education and age variables significant using the more robust standard errors How do you interpret the coefficient on educ  (viii) Obtain the fitted values,   , from the Poisson regression model. Find the minimum and maximum values and discuss how well the exponential model predicts heavy cigarette smoking. (ix) Using the fitted values from part (viii), obtain the squared correlation coefficient between   and yi. (x) Estimate a linear model for cigs by OLS, using the explanatory variables (and same functional forms) as in part (iii). Does the linear model or exponential model provide a better fit Is either R-squared very large
(vi) Using the adjusted standard errors from part (v), are the price and income elasticities now statistically different from zero Explain.
(vii) Are the education and age variables significant using the more robust standard errors How do you interpret the coefficient on educ
(viii) Obtain the fitted values, Use the data in SMOKE.RAW for this exercise. (i) The variable cigs is the number of cigarettes smoked per day. How many people in the sample do not smoke at all What fraction of people claim to smoke 20 cigarettes a day Why do you think there is a pileup of people at 20 cigarettes  (ii) Given your answers to part (i), does cigs seem a good candidate for having a conditional Poisson distribution  (iii) Estimate a Poisson regression model for cigs, including log(cigpric), log(income), white, educ, age, and age2 as explanatory variables. What are the estimated price and income elasticities  (iv) Using the maximum likelihood standard errors, are the price and income variables statistically significant at the 5% level  (v) Obtain the estimate of   described after equation. What is   How should you adjust the standard errors from part (iv)    (vi) Using the adjusted standard errors from part (v), are the price and income elasticities now statistically different from zero Explain. (vii) Are the education and age variables significant using the more robust standard errors How do you interpret the coefficient on educ  (viii) Obtain the fitted values,   , from the Poisson regression model. Find the minimum and maximum values and discuss how well the exponential model predicts heavy cigarette smoking. (ix) Using the fitted values from part (viii), obtain the squared correlation coefficient between   and yi. (x) Estimate a linear model for cigs by OLS, using the explanatory variables (and same functional forms) as in part (iii). Does the linear model or exponential model provide a better fit Is either R-squared very large , from the Poisson regression model. Find the minimum and maximum values and discuss how well the exponential model predicts heavy cigarette smoking.
(ix) Using the fitted values from part (viii), obtain the squared correlation coefficient between Use the data in SMOKE.RAW for this exercise. (i) The variable cigs is the number of cigarettes smoked per day. How many people in the sample do not smoke at all What fraction of people claim to smoke 20 cigarettes a day Why do you think there is a pileup of people at 20 cigarettes  (ii) Given your answers to part (i), does cigs seem a good candidate for having a conditional Poisson distribution  (iii) Estimate a Poisson regression model for cigs, including log(cigpric), log(income), white, educ, age, and age2 as explanatory variables. What are the estimated price and income elasticities  (iv) Using the maximum likelihood standard errors, are the price and income variables statistically significant at the 5% level  (v) Obtain the estimate of   described after equation. What is   How should you adjust the standard errors from part (iv)    (vi) Using the adjusted standard errors from part (v), are the price and income elasticities now statistically different from zero Explain. (vii) Are the education and age variables significant using the more robust standard errors How do you interpret the coefficient on educ  (viii) Obtain the fitted values,   , from the Poisson regression model. Find the minimum and maximum values and discuss how well the exponential model predicts heavy cigarette smoking. (ix) Using the fitted values from part (viii), obtain the squared correlation coefficient between   and yi. (x) Estimate a linear model for cigs by OLS, using the explanatory variables (and same functional forms) as in part (iii). Does the linear model or exponential model provide a better fit Is either R-squared very large and yi.
(x) Estimate a linear model for cigs by OLS, using the explanatory variables (and same functional forms) as in part (iii). Does the linear model or exponential model provide a better fit Is either R-squared very large
Explanation
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(i)
Consider blured image is the number of cigarette...

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Introductory Econometrics 4th Edition by Jeffrey Wooldridge
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