Hi Ben I'm in my first graduate class. I was really nervous how I would do this with classes being online- my professors aren't holding lectures. I just wanted to thank you, literally couldn't have done it without you. You're an awesome teacher.
Your videos are amazing! They are better than most explanations on books. Could you please do a video with the difference in difference approach, its advantages and others! Thank you in advance
Thank you so much!!! I had done the introductory econometrics course for the last semester but I never felt like I really understand the concepts until I saw your videos!!! They are very helpful!
One comparison is missing. How about the "identically distributed" assumption? It was said before that pooled data was not (because people age etc.)...
I have a question. Let's say in 2000 there were 10 companies and I collect data for all 10 companies now in 2011 there are 12 companies and I include all 12 in my model. So will it be pooled or panel?
@@leelabooo you are definitely right .. and extra company in 2011 makes us cancel the idea that it is a « Independently Pooled cross sectional Data ».. If he would have said in 2011 he collected just 30 observations ( in 2000, 50 observations) from one of the 10 companies ( same companies as that of 2000) It would have been a pooled data … because the population from where he collected the data didnot change.
Hi Ben I'm in my first graduate class. I was really nervous how I would do this with classes being online- my professors aren't holding lectures. I just wanted to thank you, literally couldn't have done it without you. You're an awesome teacher.
okay... i waste 3 days trying to understand that from a book and you made it clear in 4 minutes...Great work !!
Your videos are amazing! They are better than most explanations on books. Could you please do a video with the difference in difference approach, its advantages and others! Thank you in advance
Thank you so much!!! I had done the introductory econometrics course for the last semester but I never felt like I really understand the concepts until I saw your videos!!! They are very helpful!
Thanks for the video!
Very good explanation
Thank you for explanation ı need. Appreciate you.
How about Unbalanced Panel vs Pooled? By that logic are they the same?
Please what are the sources of Panel and pooled data? Please I need an answer... thank youuuu!
One comparison is missing. How about the "identically distributed" assumption?
It was said before that pooled data was not (because people age etc.)...
thank you for your explanation. very helpful
thank you!! your videos are amazing :)
I have a question. Let's say in 2000 there were 10 companies and I collect data for all 10 companies now in 2011 there are 12 companies and I include all 12 in my model. So will it be pooled or panel?
Probably to late to be helpful but this data could be analysed as unbalanced panel data
@@leelabooo It helped me, thanks!
@@leelabooo you are definitely right ..
and extra company in 2011 makes us cancel the idea that it is a « Independently Pooled cross sectional Data »..
If he would have said in 2011 he collected just 30 observations ( in 2000, 50 observations) from one of the 10 companies ( same companies as that of 2000)
It would have been a pooled data … because the population from where he collected the data didnot change.
Thank you, helped a lot
these videos r rly helpful for my final exam thx a lot.
Lovely
Thks ...