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A course mapper by Monash Association of Coding (MAC)
Empirical strategies for policy evaluation
ECX5479
Synopsis
Do small classes improve learning? Does the Cashless Welfare Card reduce drug addiction? What are the impacts of Brexit on investment in the UK? These are a few of the questions that you will be equipped to answer when completing this unit. Emphasis is placed on how to design credible evaluation strategies that allow you to provide causal estimates of the impact of a policy. Core topics cover the econometric techniques that should be known by an applied economist, including randomisation, matching, regression discontinuity design, differences-in-differences and synthetic controls. Extensions include quantile regression, mediation analysis, and analysis of distributional impacts. The unit emphasises an intuitive understanding of the validity of each approach, and the use of real data, in the computer lab, as an essential complement to lectures.
Sourced from the Monash Handbook 2026.
Quick facts
- Credit points
- 6
- Level
- 5
- Audience
- Postgraduate
- Type
- Coursework
- School
- Faculty of Business and Economics
- Faculty
- Department of Economics
- Handbook year
- 2026
Prerequisites (6)
- Introductory econometricsETC2410
- ETC3440ETC3440
- Introductory econometricsETC5241
- Introductory econometricsETF2100
- Introductory applied econometricsETF5910
- Statistical modelling for decision makingETW2510
What it unlocks
Nothing in the visible graph depends on this unit.
Offerings (2)
- First semesterClayton · ON-CAMPUS
- Second semesterCaulfield · ON-CAMPUS
Listed in 3 areas of study
- EconomicsList 1 - Additional economics unit
- EconomicsPart A. Core research studies
- Health economicsSpecified research methods elective