ECON 861 - Empirical Micro-Economics II

Instructor: Marco Cozzi

Course Webpage


Calendar Description

The course has three main goals: 1) present and discuss in some detail selected topics in the field of empirical microeconomics, 2) provide the students with a set of "advanced" applied tools, 3) develop some skills to enable the students to start their own independent empirical research.

In the course the following empirical techniques will be presented:

- Panel Data: OLS, Fixed Effects and Random Effects
- Instrumental Variables (IV)
- Limited Dependent Variables
- Sample Selection
- Duration Analysis
- Structural Models of the Labor Market

Moreover, the following economic applications will be discussed:

- Human Capital, Returns to Education and Tenure
- Dynamic Models of Labor Supply and Occupational Choice
- Wage Inequality
- Discrimination
- 'Natural Experiments' and Program Evaluation
- Equilibrium Unemployment: Search and Matching
- Labor Market Institutions and Optimal Unemployment Insurance

Winter Term Timetable
List of Graduate Courses


Return to the QED home page