The Econometrics of Individual Risk: Credit, Insurance, and Marketing
By (Author) Christian Gourieroux
By (author) Joann Jasiak
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
6th October 2015
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Finance and the finance industry
Sales and marketing
330.015195
Paperback
256
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
369g
The individual risks faced by banks, insurers, and marketers are less well understood than aggregate risks such as market-price changes. But the risks incurred or carried by individual people, companies, insurance policies, or credit agreements can be just as devastating as macroevents such as share-price fluctuations. A comprehensive introduction,
"I don't know of any other book with this orientation. It promises to fill a gap in both the econometric and finance literature."Torben G. Andersen, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University
"The Econometrics of Individual Risk gives a nice overview of a new area and manages to combine a good technical account with clarity. No other book to my knowledge has managed to fill this particular niche. It is well organized and well written, and the scholarship is excellent."Kevin Dowd, Nottingham University Business School
"This book is simply outstanding. Its approach is powerful yet practical, and many of its results and insights are original. The combination of analytical power and applied sense is very, very rare. And the financial events modeled in the book are important and common in applied financial contexts."Francis X. Diebold, University of Pennsylvania
Christian Gourieroux is Director of the Laboratory for Finance and Insurance at the Center for Research in Economics and Statistics (CREST) in Paris, and Professor at the University of Toronto. He is the coauthor of Statistics and Econometric Models, Simulation-Based Econometric Methods, and Time Series and Dynamic Models. Joann Jasiak is Associate Professor of Economics at York University, Toronto. She and Christian Gourieroux are the authors of Financial Econometrics (Princeton).