Even in 1945…
(with thanks to Alex and YouTube) → Read more
Author: Sebi Buhai
Easterly on Randomized Evaluation
By far the best read of the current week (as yet, but looks incredibly difficult to surpass this):
→ Read moreHere’s an imagined dialogue between the two sides on Randomized Evaluation (RE) based on this book:FOR: Amazing RE power lets us identify causal effect of project treatment on the treated.
Econlinks
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The top 100 global thinkers, according to Foreign Policy. With the usual caveats: some should clearly not be there, others are missing (even from the first 5 positions, say…) etc.
Tokyo, Narisawa, Takemitsu: Arigato!
It happened almost two months ago (see last bullet point here), so I’ve thought it is about time I gave you some impressions about my Tokyo trip :-). Obviously I do not plan to get into what you can find described in detail online, e.g.
→ Read more Weekend econlinks
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Sharing information in scientific research: yes/no/when. Interesting, but the analysis here is applicable only in the context of some sciences (arguably, not most). Moreover, sharing by means of co-authorship is discussed at best indirectly (if one is willing to expand on their repeated interaction game thread…).