Introduction to Panel Data Analysis 2024 (Melbourne)
Going fast

Introduction to Panel Data Analysis 2024 (Melbourne)

Introduction to Panel Data Analysis

By Melbourne Institute

Date and time

Mon, 27 May 2024 9:15 AM - Thu, 30 May 2024 4:00 PM AEST

Location

Melbourne Institute: Applied Economic & Social Research

Level 6, 111 Barry St Carlton, VIC 3010 Australia

Refund Policy

Contact the organiser to request a refund.

About this event

  • 3 days 6 hours

A 4-day hands-on introductory course on panel data analysis will be held in Melbourne on 27 - 30 May 2024.

This course is designed for people familiar with panel data, including how to clean data and set it up for analysis, but now want to understand various statistical and econometric techniques that take full advantage of the panel nature of the data.

The topics covered in the course include:

  • Longitudinal descriptive statistics, such as cross-wave correlations, conditional means and transition probabilities
  • Regression analysis, including using pooled data, or cross-sectional techniques using lagged data
  • Instrumental variables in panel data
  • First-differences
  • Second- (and longer) differences
  • Fixed effects
  • Random effects
  • Binary response models
  • Categorical response models
  • Difference-in-differences

Data from the HILDA Survey will be used during the course and participants will be required to apply for, and be approved to use, the General Release 20 datasets prior to the course. The course will take several published papers using the HILDA Survey data with a view to reproducing some of the estimates presented by the authors. The course will be taught in Stata.

Course Instructor

The course will be presented by Professor Robert Breunig, who is a researcher at the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University. His primary applied research interests are in analysing individual and firm behaviour, evaluating government tax and transfer programs and analysing large data sets.

Pre-requisites

To participate in this course, you will need to:

• Have completed the Getting Started: Analysing HILDA with Stata course or have experience with the HILDA Survey data and be familiar with Stata

• Be familiar with regression theory

• Apply for and be approved to use HILDA General Release 20

• Have HILDA General Release 20 accessible from your laptop

• Have Stata (Version 14 or above) on your computer (student licenses can be provided if needed)

Places are limited. Registrations close 5pm 17 May 2024 unless all places are taken earlier. Cancellations after this will not be refunded.

If you would like to receive notifications of future training courses, please subscribe to the HILDA mailing list.

For further information on this training course please contact Brooke Garrard, brooke.garrard@unimelb.edu.au

The information on this form is being collected by the University of Melbourne for further communication regarding events at the University in which you have expressed interest. Information collected will only be used by authorised staff for the purpose for which it was collected and will be protected against unauthorized access and use. You can access any personal information the University holds about you. Contact the Privacy Officer to find out more. The University’s Privacy Policy is available online.

Organised by

The Melbourne Institute is Australia’s pre-eminent economic and social policy research centre. For 60 years world-class economists have conducted rigorous, independent research and analysis, providing an evidence base for effective policy reform.

It is renowned for the long-running Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey and Consumer Attitudes, Sentiments and Expectations in Australia (CASiE) Survey, and more recently Taking the Pulse of the Nation which provides timely insight into Australians' sentiments and behaviours related to current economic and social issues.

The Melbourne Institute analyses provide depth and rigour to help solve some of the most pressing and complex issues affecting ordinary Australians, striving to advance opportunity, equity and prosperity for our nation.

The University of Melbourne and Eventbrite collect your personal information to manage your registration and contact you regarding this event. Your information may also be used by the University and Eventbrite for analysis, quality assurance and planning purposes. For further information please visit the University of Melbourne’s website and Eventbrite’s Privacy Policy.

From $1,155