OK, it is time to go back to a seminar room, hopefully for a convincing empirical &/or theoretical work ;-)solid empirical evidence, even of the complicated econometric sort, changes plenty of minds.I have a few quibbles. Surely some — perhaps all too many — economists are indeed locked into ideologically motivated beliefs. Consider the response of fresh-water macroeconomists to the utter failure of their predictions about inflation; who other than Narayana Kocherlakota has made the slightest concession to the people who got it right? I’m also skeptical about the persuasive power of complicated econometrics; my sense is that mind-changing empirical work almost always involves not much more than simple correlations, usually from natural experiments — that is, even multiple regression turns out, in practice, to be too complicated to persuade.On the other hand, I would argue that empirical work isn’t the only thing that can change minds: really clear analytical arguments can do it too, by letting economists see things that were in front of their noses but overlooked because they didn’t have a framework.
A repository of (mainly) economic pieces of information (newspaper and academic articles, podcasts, etc) I have found interesting and useful and that I would like to share with colleagues, students or friends.
Friday, January 22, 2016
Convincing empirical ... and theoretical work
We are currently in the middle of the junior job market, and it is refreshing to read from Paul Krugman:
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