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Revision as of 09:48, 26 August 2015
R is an open source software that has been been adopted by the statistical community as its standard software package. It is a command driven software, meaning that you will have to give the software written commands to indicate what you do. On first sight this is not as convenient as a menu driven software, but it has the huge advantage that you can collect a large set of commands in a file (script file) and then have R execute all these commands in one go. This then serves as a great documentation of the work you have done and most importantly it makes it easy to change a small aspect of your work and rerun the entire project on the press of a button rather than having to laboriously retrace all your steps through menus.
The fixed cost of learning this software is higher than learning a menu driven statistical software package. But if you engage with this process the rewards will be great.
Last not least, R has a killer advantage. It is free!!!
Contents
Installing the Software
To work with R you will have to install the basic software package R, but we also advise you to install RStudio, which is an add-on to R (formally called an Integrated Development Environment - IDE) which makes working with R easier.
As this is open-source software that you get for free it is perhaps understandable that the webpages from which you get the R software aren't as slick as you expect. And the language tends to be somewhat more techy, but don't worry, you'll be fine.
So here are the steps you should take.
- Download and install the R software, which is available from the CRAN website. Follow the "Download and Install R" link (and do not be tempted to download the source code!) for your operating system. If you have a window OS only choose the "base" package on the following screen. Then follow the usual installation instructions. You could now already work with R, but we recommend that you first undertake the next step.
- Once we have installed R, we can download and install RStudio. You can download it from the RStudio download page.
The basic R software has some basic functionality, but the power of R comes from the ability to use code written to perform statistical and econometric techniques that has been written by other people. These additional pieces of software are called packages and the next step will be to learn how ot use these.
Data Sets
We use a number of datasets on this page. For convenience they are listed here:
Women's wages | Crime Statistics | Baseball Wages | |
---|---|---|---|
Description | Observations for 753 females on wages, familiar and work circumstances hours worked and wages | Crime Statistics for 90 counties in North Carolina (US) for Years 1981 to 1987 (Panel Data); includes a number of variables to characterise the counties | Salary and other information (such as race, position and performance information) for 353 Baseball Players in 1993 |
Files | mroz.xls mroz.csv Variable Description |
crime4.xls crime4.csv |
mlb1.xls mlb1.csv Variable Description |
Source | Wooldridge Book Companion Page | Wooldridge Book Companion Page | Wooldridge Book Companion Page |
Following the links in the above table you will also be able to download R data files for these datasets.
Basic Tasks
To illustrate how to perform basic tasks in R we will use the Women's wages dataset (mroz.csv). This is a comma separated value (csv) file that contains a dataset which we will use for our first steps in R. It is a well used cross-sectional dataset with 753 observations of female members of the labour force in the US (in 1975). It contains variables such as the number of children, the wage, the hours worked etc.
First Steps | Loading Data and Date Formats |
Basic Data Analysis |
A Regression |
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Discussion | Discussion | Discussion | Discussion |
Using Packages |
Creating Graphics |
Saving Data and Screen Output |
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Discussion | Discussion Treat Yourself |
Discussion |
Bread and Butter Techniques
These are standard econometric problems tasks that any applied econometrician, and indeed aspiring economics students, should be familiar with.
Dummy variables |
Predicting from a Regression |
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Discussion | Discussion |
Standard inference |
Regression diagnostics |
Robust standard errors |
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Discussion | Discussion | Discussion |
Intermediate Techniques
Panel Data |
Instrumental Variables Estimation |
Matching |
---|---|---|
Discussion | Discussion | Discussion |
Univariate Time Series Modelling |
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Discussion |
Econometric Demonstrations
In this section you can find code that can be useful to demonstrate a few econometric issues.
Demonstrating OLS estimator unbiasedness |
Demonstrating OLS estimator asymptotic behaviour |
---|---|
Discussion | Discussion |
Authors, Maintenance and Contributions
This wiki was created by Ralf Becker and James Lincoln with the financial support of a University of Manchester CHERIL grant. If you have any suggestions please contact us by email. Contributions to this wiki are encouraged. Please contact us if you are interested.
An easy way to create content for this page is to write RMarkdown documents which can then easily be translated, thanks to pandoc, to MediaWiki format (see [1]).
More references
There is a plethora of resources if you want to learn R (which is one reason why this resource does not go into too much detail). Here are a few places to start.
- A dedicated tweet channel for Econometrics with R [2]
- Rob Hyndman has great material [3], some of which will be referred to here.
- A Beginner's Guide to R
- Some R resources provided by UCLA
- Quick-R web-site and first chapter of R in Action
- Just TryR it! [4]