
Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach 6th Edition by Jeffrey M Wooldridge
Edition 6ISBN: 130527010X
Introductory Econometrics: A Modern Approach 6th Edition by Jeffrey M Wooldridge
Edition 6ISBN: 130527010XRefer to the example used in Section 4.4. You will use the data set TWOYEAR.RAW.
(i) The variable phsrank is the person's high school percentile. (A higher number is better. For example, 90 means you are ranked better than 90 percent of your graduating class.) Find the smallest, largest, and average phsrank in the sample.
(ii) Add phsrank to equation (4.26) and report the OLS estimates in the usual form. Is phsrank statistically significant? How much is 10 percentage points of high school rank worth in terms of wage?
(iii) Does adding phsrank to (4.26) substantively change the conclusions on the returns to two- and four-year colleges? Explain.
(iv) The data set contains a variable called id. Explain why if you add id to equation (4.17) or (4.26) you expect it to be statistically insignificant. What is the two-sided p-value?
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When phsrank is added to (4.26), we get the following:

So phsrank has a t statistic equal to only 1.25; it is not statistically significant. If we increase phsrank by 10, log(wage) is predicted to increase by (.0003)10 = .003. This implies a 0.3% increase in wage, which seems a modest increase given a 10 percentage point increase in phsrank. (However, the sample standard deviation of phsrank is about 24.)
Step 2 of 3
Step 3 of 3
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