Sport Economics project.

My topic is that “the owner of the club is wealthier, they can spend more on payrol (even if they incur “losses”). This makes the team better, ceteris paribus, and generates a “gift” of freater economic activity to the cit that hosts the team.

 

 

 

Here is introduction: a. The easiest way to communicate a lot of observations about something is with a graphical or tabular statistical summary. The clever use of scatterplots, line graphs, histograms, other methods of visualizing data, and tables of conditional means (averages), can efficiently tell a story that would otherwise take many paragraphs of text and anecdotes.

You don’t have to construct figures from raw data personally. This is where the academic papers (written by economists) come in: together the empirical literature about your topic has dozens of tables and figures summarizing economic data. Concern yourself with finding the right ones, rather than making them yourself.

 

Once you have found the (I expect 6-8) 1 figures or tables you need, compile them into slides, e.g., using PowerPoint, and add informative captions in which you cite the sources. It’s also advisable to make the figures and tables “self-contained” by briefly explaining how the author gathered the data and any technical notes on the presentation; put this in the caption as well.

 

You must submit a file, e.g., .ppt or .pdf, containing your slides to the drop box

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