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Chapter 1
Regression Models
1.1 Introduction
Regression models form the core of the discipline of econometrics. Although
econometricians routinely estimate a wide variety of statistical models, using
many different types of data, the vast majority of these are either regression
models or close relatives of them. In this chapter, we introduce the concept of
a regression model, discuss several varieties of them, and introduce the estima-
tion method that is most commonly used with regression models, namely, least
squares. This estimation method is derived by using the method of moments,
which is a very general principle of estimation that has many applications in
econometrics.
The most elementary type of regression model is the simple linear regression
model, which can be expressed by the following equation:
= + + (101)
1 2
The subscript is used to index the observations of a sample. The total num-
ber of observations, also called the sample size, will be denoted by . Thus,
for a sample of size , the subscript runs from 1 to . Each observation
comprises an observation on a dependent variable, written as for observa-
tion , and an observation on a single explanatory variable, or independent
variable, written as .
The relation (1.01) links the observations on the dependent and the explana-
tory variables for each observation in terms of two unknown parameters, 1
and , and an unobserved error term, . Thus, of the five quantities that
2
appear in (1.01), two, and , are observed, and three, , , and , are
1 2
not. Three of them, , , and , are specific to observation
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