Getting Started
Welcome!!!!
About Me
- Grew up in Brooklyn, NY
- Came here when I was 3 from Ukraine


Undergraduate Education
- Graduated with Masters in Economics and Bachelor’s in Philosophy


Graduate Education
- PhD in Agricultural and Resource Economics
- Studied Industrial Organization and Development Economics
- Research
- New technologies in developing countries
- Rideshare (Uber, SafeBoda)
- Drones for health supply delivery
- Data Gaps
- Remote Sensing
- Machine Learning
- Teaching
- EC034 - Data Science for Economists
- EC031 - Intro. to Econometrics
After Graduate School
Research at Cornell
- Center for Data Science for Enterprise and Society
My Research
- How do households use new technologies to cope with shocks?
- Droughts/floods
- Migration/Agriculture
- Uber Drivers in Uganda
- Can flexibility in setting labor hours be a net benefit?
- Can we help drivers smooth shocks by giving access to weather insurance?
- How much does the structure of earnings affect their labor supply and behavior? What if we provided them with more salary-like earnings?
Other Research
What is the effectiveness of using UAV drones to deliver health supplies in hard-to-reach areas in Ghana?
What are the impacts (both intended and unintended) of a policy in India to allow women to work in factories at night?
How well can we predict human capital indicators (?) using remote sensing data?
But started in something WAAAY different:
- Effects of 1905 Russian land reform on market power in peasant agriculture
Not at Work
- Hiking
- Reading
- Video Games (open world RPGs)
- Trying new restaurants
Your Turn
- What kinds of questions do you want to answer with econometrics?
- What are your interests?
- Why are you taking this course?
What is this course about?
- How do we use econometrics to understand economic problems?
- What is the difference between econometrics and statistics?
- What is causality?
- What is regression?
- What is linear regression?
- Why do economists like to use linear regression?
- Why are economists so interested in normality?
Syllabus Review
- Prereq: EC31
- Class Meeting and Location: MW 10:30-11:45; Kohlberg 115
- Office: Kohlberg 220
- Textbook: Essentials of Statistics for Business and Economics, 9th edition
- Non-graphing calculator
Course Expectations
- We will learn about random variables and statistical functions
- Requires some algebra
- Attendance is strongly encouraged
- Econometrics is about being exposed to concepts over and over until it “clicks.”
Office Hours
- Really good tutoring program
- It’s free!
- You ask questions to the tutor and then they write your exam.
- What is it?
Additional Resources
- Office Hours: MW 12-1 and by appointment
- Meet with me: https://calendar.app.google/JnBAUe2jEY9fnMpQ7
- Please schedule office hours if needed! They are there for you!
- 1:1 tutoring with a TA is also available, but needs to be scheduled
Grading
Task Percentage Grade
- Problem Sets 15%
- Midterm 20%
- Final Exam 20%
- In-class Group Activities 25%
- Group Project 20%
Participation
- You need to actively participate in class discussions. You learn more when you are actively participating instead of passively listening to lectures!
- Don’t hesitate to ask questions.
- No such thing as a bad question. I’m sure if you have a question, odds are someone else is having the same thought
- Participation (and indirectly, attendance) counts towards your grade!
Problem Sets
- There will be problem sets every other week
- Problem sets are individual submission
- No late problem sets; get to drop lowest one. See syllabus for rest
Group Project
- With a group, your job will be to submit and then present a replication project
- Economics and other social sciences put much more emphasis on replicability and data transparency.
- Most peer-reviewed journals have a replication policy and make replication packages publicly available
- Your group project will be to replicate a paper, write-up what the paper was about, how easy it was to replicate, and submit your project AS a replication package.
- A list of papers will be provided to choose from.
In-class Group Activities
- Every Wednesday, we will have group activities in class.
- These will be worth 15% of your grade.
- These activities will include empirical exercises that will help hone your Stata skills and your understanding of econometric concepts.
- You will work in groups of 2-3 people for these activities. Your two lowest scores on these activities will be dropped.
TA Clinics
- Clinic hours will be held on Tuesdays, 7-9pm in Kohlberg 116
- Attending TA and clinic hours are immensely helpful!
Tip
Sydney Ross sross3@swarthmore.edu
Bori Chung bchung1@swarthmore.edu
Grace Liu gliu3@swarthmore.edu
Nicholas Zuk nzuk1@swarthmore.edu
Stata
- Part of this course involves learning how to do data analysis, directory structure and coding in Stata
- This is an invaluable skill that will help you in both this class, any statistics/econometrics course as well as other parts of your life.
Using AI
- AI is a great helper for code
- But given the proprietary nature of Stata, helpers like Co-Pilot haven’t been trained on a lot of Stata code.
- Using AI to help you code is great, but make sure to check that the code makes sense.
- We will also use AI in some parts of the course so I can teach you how to use it effectively.
Stata Workshops
- Dr. Tao Wang (twang1@swarthmore.edu) is the Lead Associate of the Social Sciences Quantitative Lab.
- He is available through his own office hours as a resource for your Stata needs and your empirical projects. Ella Foster-Molina and the SSQL TAs will also hold office hours that you may attend; these hours are also described at the link above.
- Dr. Wang will be teaching 5-6 Stata workshops during the course of our semester. You are required to attend the first workshop.
- Install Stata on your machine by January 26th. There will be time during the first workshop to help you install it if you run into trouble.
Final Words
- Econometrics and causal inference are probably the part of economics is used most widely in other fields and is the main contribution to the sciences (very strong statement)
- Please use office hours to your advantage!
- Office hours are for you!
- They are a priority for me and it’s time I set up specifically to help
- Successful students tend to use office hours
- I want to get to know you better!