Objectives of this class

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ITRN 501: Fall 2008 Methods of Analysis for International Commerce and Policy Class 2 Instructor: Danilo Pelletiere [email protected]

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ITRN 501: Fall 2008 Methods of Analysis for International Commerce and Policy Class 2 Instructor: Danilo Pelletiere [email protected]. Objectives of this class. Students will: be proficient in the most basic quantitative methods used in international commerce policy. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Objectives of this class

Page 1: Objectives of this class

ITRN 501: Fall 2008

Methods of Analysis for International Commerce

and PolicyClass 2

Instructor: Danilo [email protected]

Page 2: Objectives of this class

Objectives of this classStudents will:• be proficient in the most basic quantitative methods

used in international commerce policy.

• have experience retrieving and formatting quantitative data from standard sources.

• be familiar with multivariate analysis methods.

• understand some of the most prevalent practical problems and ethical issues confronting policy analysis.

• complete a project drawing on their knowledge of these elements.

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What are data?

• A representation of facts, concepts, or instructions in a formalized manner suitable for communication, interpretation, or processing by humans …

• Characteristics of data determine the possible methods of analysis

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The subjective/objectivenormative/positive debate

In popular usage: • Objective matters can be observed and

quantified and all must reach the same basic result in assessing them.

• Subjective matters are open to individual interpretation.

• Positive statement - a statement of “fact” without indication of approval.

• Normative statement - expresses whether a situation is desirable or undesirable.

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The qualitative/quantitative debate

• Quantitative data can be counted and the results of statistical analysis are meaningful.– Basic interpretation is clear, i.e. x>y.

• Qualitative data are meaningful to humans but can not be counted or manipulated with statistical methods.– Researcher/reader must be relied on for

basic interpretation.

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The practical synthesis• The debate is limiting to the policy analyst. Data and

methods should be assessed as they are useful and necessary to address a problem.– There is plenty that can be subjective, normative and

qualitative in quantitative analysis.

– Sometimes qualitative data are the best or only data there are

• Mixed methods often lead to better questions and stronger, more persuasive results, reaching broader audiences.– Case studies and anecdotes can motivate, explain, support, or

raise questions about quantitative results.

• With coding, qualitative data can be introduced to quantitative models.

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Types of data used in this class (scales)

• Numeric variables – – Interval data have meaningful intervals

between measurements, but there is no true starting point (zero).

• 20 C is twice 10 C but 68 F is not twice 50 F

– Ratio data have the highest level of measurement. Ratios between measurements as well as intervals are meaningful because there is a starting point (zero).

– Basic policy research mostly assumes ratio scales.

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Types of data used in this class (scales) cont.

Ordered Categorical Variables – or ordinal data allow the ranking of the data, e.g. bigger/smaller, healthier/less healthy etc., but the interval is meaningless

• Unordered Categorical Variables – or nominal data are categorical data where the order of the categories is arbitrary, e.g. race, religion, colors.

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Types of statistical data (scales)

• Discrete Variable – Has a limited number of known values, e.g. number of automobiles imported by Ghana can not be 100,000.2.

• Continuous Variable – Can take any value, weight tends to have this quality and currency does to a great extent. Ghana could import 1,000,000.25713 KG worth of automobiles, – even if it is not likely significant at this level of

precision.

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The use of statistical methods to analyze data does not

(necessarily) make a study more “scientific”, “rigorous”, or

“objective.”

1) The wrong method

2) The wrong data

3) The wrong question

4) Just wrong (error)

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Error in data and analysis• Random error

– Sampling error– Random misclassification

• Systematic error/bias– Systematic non-random deviation from the true

values.– Can be conscious or unconscious.

– Need not be “on purpose.”

– Bias creates an association that is untrue.– Confounding error creates an association that

is true but potentially misleading.

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Ideally, problem determines methods and data, and these in turn your conclusions…– You should not assemble data to prove your point.

(Sometimes we can be selective to make a point.)– Method choice or data availability should not

determine problem definition, • i.e. if you have a hammer you should not make

every problem a nail.

(We are unaware of all possibilities and they are not always at our disposal.)

In sum, we try not to use statistics as a drunk might use a street lamp:– For support rather than illumination, or – To decide where (or what) to look for.

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Thinking in models

• What is a model?– Explains which elements relate to each

other and how.– Describing Relationships in a model

• Covariation – move in the same direction– Direct or Positive – Inverse or Negative– Nonlinear

• False of spurious– Control (confounding) variables

• Are you looking for the best model or testing someone else’s?

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Developing models

• Where does a model come from?– From your own assessment and

observation of the problem, or from talking to others.

– From the literature.• Elements others include or consider important• Definitions of these elements • Descriptions of the “expected” relationships

among variables• Results and explanations• Sources and strategies for data• Suggestions of models or variations to be

tested in the future

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Types of Models

1. Symbolic• Economic growth is a function of

changes to the amount of capital (K) and changes to the amount of Labor (L).

• G=f(K,L)

• G=α+β1K+β1L+e

2. Schematic Capital

Labor

Econ Growth

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The importance of writing• Policy writing is a fundamental form of analysis:

– Written results must “track” and be accessible. • If it does not make written sense, and the argumentation

does not follow, the analysis is suspect.

– Writing helps the researcher and not just the reader understand the results.

– Results without a well written analysis will generally have less policy influence.

• Bad results with good writing often have a greater impact than they deserve.

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The importance of critical thinking and logic

• Received wisdom is not always right…• But if want to say that it isn’t you need to

recognize it, and address its failings.• Familiarize yourself with common fallacies

• http://www.unc.edu/depts/wcweb/handouts/fallacies.html• http://www.nobeliefs.com/fallacies.htm• http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/

– Hasty generalization– Unrepresentative sample– Post Hoc– Straw man– Category errors– Non sequitor

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Tables and figures

• Must also include anything necessary for proper interpretation. Exhibits must be able to stand ALONE.• Titles – tells reader what is going on,

what they are looking at, may provide some interpretation.

• All relevant data, no irrelevant data must be included.

• Clear labels titling data and units• Sources

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Tables

• Tables are used to present many data series or variables or when details are important.

• Columns should be fewer than rows in most instances.

• Nested tables, crosstabs etc.

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Source: World Bank (2006) Moldova Poverty Update

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Line graph

• Often best to show change over a series of points in time, or any continuous change (i.e. income distribution)

• X axis (time) series variable

• Y axis variable of interest

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Source: World Bank (2006) Moldova Poverty Update

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Bar graph

• Can be used with just two data points• More visually striking when fewer

data points are expressed. • For comparisons of multiple

observations over a few years it can overcome the spaghetti problem of line charts.

• Can be combined with line charts to good effect.

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Source: World Bank (2006) Moldova Poverty Update

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Source: World Bank (2006) Moldova Poverty Update

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Pie chart

• Used to show proportions and shares at a point in time

• Must add up to a meaningful total• Often used for comparisons when

other charts would be preferable.

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Figure 2.1 Types of Drugs Used by Past Month Illicit Drug Users Aged 12 or Older: 2003

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       D

Source: US DHHS (2004) 2003 National Survey on Drug Use & Health: Results

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Shares in bars: better for comparison

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Issues and tricks

• Scale and origin• Using indexes to compare variables with

different scales.• Normalize by a variable such as population.• Show only the most important relationships.

– Provide full data in appendix tables

• Titles can lead reader as long as subtitles, and all other required information are clear and complete

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The final project

• What are others saying about trade and your country?

• What is your model?– What is happening and why?

• Do you have the data you need?– Can you get them?– What do you think they say?

• Is the data ready for presentation?• Start writing and be ready to reiterate

these steps.