I just finished reading Roberto Pedace's 2013 book Econometrics for Dummies. As you might expect from a book written as part of Wiley's 'Dummies' series, the book is written as a basic introduction to its topic, starting from the basics of probability distributions, and ending with a brief primer on how to conduct an econometrics research project, as well as common mistakes to avoid in applied econometrics.
The book mostly hits the mark as a good introduction. However, Pedace clearly has a high opinion of dummies, because he assumes a great deal of statistical understanding. The book also has a lot of mathematical formulae to negotiate. To be fair to Pedace, it would be difficult to teach econometrics without the formulae without turning it into a 'recipe book' of steps to follow that would not help readers to understand. Nevertheless, I feel like the book could have been pitched perhaps a little lower, as more of a stepping stone between basic statistics and a full introduction to econometrics.
Nevertheless, the book is well written and easy to follow. Pedace does use some unusual terminology though. I struggled with his reference to categorical variables as "qualitative variables". In my mind, qualitative is something quite different. The book is also a little repetitive at times, in part because Pedace has written it in a way where the reader need not necessarily linearly follow through each chapter, but instead can jump directly to the bits of most relevance without missing out on important details that are hidden earlier in the text.
The book may be an introduction for dummies, but Pedace certainly stretches the dummies. I really appreciated that it included a discussion of difference-in-differences (and regular readers of this blog will recognise that this is a research approach that is applied quite commonly in research papers). I also thought that Pedace gave the clearest description of the difference between fixed effects and random effects models for panel data, as well as the Hausman test. Although applications of econometrics to panel data are a feature of every econometrics textbook, in my mind most do not clearly explain these models. At least, not as well as Pedace does.
Finally, the book offers an online 'cheat sheet', although I was disappointed that this seemed to simply be a static webpage, and not really a sheet that can be downloaded or printed.
Overall, this book is a good accompaniment to a full econometrics textbook, or as a memory aid for those who did econometrics some years ago and want the simple details quickly. Or, for those who want an intermediate step between introductory statistics and a full econometrics book such as Mastering 'Metrics (which I reviewed here) or Mostly Harmless Econometrics (which I reviewed here).

