Friday, October 31, 2008
Graduate Programmes in Economics and Psychology
http://www.iarep.org/graduateprograms.htm
Reminder: Book Club
It is not possible to get the book for free online, but you can read extracts (though not print) thanks to Google and Oxford Press: here
Some Background Information:
John Rawls (February 21, 1921 – November 24, 2002) was an American philosopher, a professor of political philosophy at Harvard University and author of A Theory of Justice (1971), revised in 1975 and 1999. Rawls was a recipient of the Schock Prize for Logic and Philosophy and the National Humanities Medal in 1999, the latter presented by President Bill Clinton, in recognition of how Rawls's thought "helped a whole generation of learned Americans revive their faith in democracy itself."
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Behavioural Economics and Financial Regulation
http://www.newamerica.net/files/naf_behavioral_v5.pdf
Reminder: Economics and Psychology Conference Maynooth
http://www.nuim.ie/location/maps/south.shtml
Further details are available below
http://geary.ucd.ie/behaviour/index.php/Home/One-Day-Symposium.html
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Working With Missing Data in Survey Analysis
A few of us have been discussing missing data and how to address it (mostly with multiple imputation) recently. Below is a list of some resources we have found. If anyone else is aware of other missing data lecture-notes, multiple imputation software packages or relevant econometric estimators, I suggest that we build up a list in the comments on this post.
(i) The NBER econometrics video (and lecture-notes) on missing values - this is done by Woolridge: http://www.nber.org/WNE/lect_12_missing.pdf
(ii) The Gary King lecture-notes on missing values: http://gking.harvard.edu/g2001syl/files/eviltlkP.pdf These notes mention the software package developed by Gary King to implement multiple imputation of missing values. The package is called Amelia and there is a comprehensive guide to it made available by King here: http://gking.harvard.edu/amelia/
(In general, the King site has some great notes - available here)
(iii) A political science lecturer from UCD called Jos Elkink has some lecture-notes on missing values: http://jaeweb.cantr.net/aqm_2008_lecture_missing.pdf
(iv) The multiple imputation FAQ page: http://www.stat.psu.edu/~jls/mifaq.html#ref
(v) http://www.multiple-imputation.com/
(vi) Stephen Soldz's resources for missing data: http://www.soldzresearch.com/statisticsresources.htm#MissingData
(vii) The Southampton CASS course on missing values: http://www.s3ri.soton.ac.uk/cass/showcourse.php?id=71
(viii) The course from the Cambridge Biostatistics Unit (Patrick Royston is one of the lecturers here): http://www.mrc-bsu.cam.ac.uk/MIcourse/index.shtml
(ix) The ICE software package in STATA: http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/Stata/library/ice.htm
(x) The Hotdeck module in STATA: http://ideas.repec.org/c/boc/bocode/s366901.html
(xi) David Howell's notes on working with missing data:
http://www.uvm.edu/~dhowell/StatPages/More_Stuff/Missing_Data/Missing.html
(xii) Joe Schafer's notes on missing data in longitudinal studies:
http://www.stat.psu.edu/~jls/aaps_schafer.pdf
(xiii) Richard Williams' notes on missing data (including traditional approaches in STATA): http://www.nd.edu/~rwilliam/stats2/l12.pdf
(xiv) A book on missing data by Patrick E McKnight et al., made partially available by Googlebooks here
The Short- and Long-Term Career Effects of Graduating in a Recession
The authors analyse the long-term effects of graduating in a recession on earnings and job mobility. The data they use is a large sample of Canadian college graduates and matched university-employer-employee data from 1982 to 1999. They find that young graduates entering the labor market in a recession suffer significant initial earnings losses --- that eventually fade, but only after 8 to 10 years. They also document that there are individual differences in how recession affects post-graduation labour market circumstances.
The Oreopoulos, von Wachter and Heisz paper brings to mind another NBER paper (from last year) by Oyer; it was entitled "The Making of an Investment Banker: Macroeconomic Shocks, Career Choice, and Lifetime Income". It used a survey of Stanford MBAs from the classes of 1960 to 1997 to analyse the relationship between the state of the stock market at graduation, initial job placement, and long-term labor market outcomes. We discussed it on the blog here.
identity, values, coping styles and economic downturn
A number of attempts have occurred in recent years to incorporate identity into economic analysis including work by Akerlof and Kranton. Viewing business failure and unemployment as identity threats is clearly one route to trying to explain the very large effects on well-being and, in particular, why they seem to be independent of income losses.
One psychological construct that is particularly relevant to this is the idea of "contingencies of self-worth". The review by Crocker and Knight below is a good overview of the concept
"Abstract—We argue that the importance of self-esteem lies in what people believe they need to be or do to have worth as a person. These contingencies of self-worth are both sources of motivation and areas of psychological vulnerability. In domains of contingent self-worth, people pursue self-esteem by attempting to validate their abilities and qualities. This pursuit of self-esteem, we argue, has costs to learning, relationships, autonomy, self-regulation, and mental and physical health. We suggest alternatives to this costly pursuit of self-esteem."
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118706337/abstract
As well as identity, a number of papers have shown that political values can moderate the relationship between socio-economic status and self-esteem
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/118502361/abstract?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0
To my knowledge, there is not a wide literature on how values and identity condition the psychological response to deterioration in economic circumstances. I have been looking through some papers on the role of coping styles in moderating the effect of unemployment on psychological distress such as the paper below.
http://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/joepsy/v22y2001i4p461-482.html
The Feudal Society in Today's University
The Feudal Society in Today's University
Houck, James P.
URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ags:umaemp:8443&r=edu
Few institutions puzzle outsiders as much as the modern university. Even insiders may not grasp the primal essence of its life and behavior. The sheer size and diversity of many universities defeats orderly consideration. We adopt crude simplifications or, worse, numbing obfuscation. This is entirely unnecessary. The core of university life can be illuminated clearly through the prism of a rich and beguiling metaphor. This metaphor requires only that we see today's university as a thinly disguised feudal society such as existed in Europe during the 11th or 12th century A.D. In this medieval context, many otherwise baffling modern mysteries in academe become transparent.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
hedonistic paradox
Konow, James & Earley, Joseph, 2008. "The Hedonistic Paradox: Is homo economicus happier," Journal of Public Economics, Elsevier, vol. 92(1-2), pages 1-33, February. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
Psychological Costs of Unsustainable Housing Commitments
Psychological Consequences of Unsustainable Housing Commitments
Brown, Sarah & Taylor, Karl & Wheatley Price, Stephen, 2005. "Debt and distress: Evaluating the psychological cost of credit," Journal of Economic Psychology, Elsevier, vol. 26(5), pages 642-663, October. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
Monday, October 27, 2008
hopkins and king - improving vignettes
http://gking.harvard.edu/files/implement.pdf
Religion and Recession
Religion as Insurance
The role of other non-monetary forms of insurance against losing your economic status during a recession have also been widely discussed. The role of networks of social interactions bound up in the concept of "social capital" is discussed in several papers. Social capital can directly affect our monetary position through offering access to informal credit and labour market networks. It may also buffer people against psychological isolation experienced during the course of a transition from the labour market.
The other aspect examined frequently in the literature is the role of the "set-point", a fixed level of well-being that we carry with us as a disposition. The idea being that no matter how bleak the economic environment becomes, some people have a cheerful and optimistic disposition that will carry them through any circumstances. The extent to which the set-point is a good description of well-being is one of the big topics in this literature. Those who believe it a good description point to the famous Brickman et al paper that showed remarkable returns to baseline happiness among people who had been paralysed and people who won the lottery. However, several papers including the one below have found that life satisfaction can be adjusted permanently by stressful life events. The second paper is particularly strong on the idea that we adapt to many things but that unemployment, particularly for men, is genuinely life altering in a negative sense.
Clark, Andrew E & Georgellis, Yannis & Sanfey, Peter, 2001. "Scarring: The Psychological Impact of Past Unemployment," Economica, London School of Economics and Political Science, vol. 68(270), pages 221-41, Ma
AndrewE. Clark & Ed Diener & Yannis Georgellis & RichardE. Lucas, 2008. "Lags And Leads in Life Satisfaction: a Test of the Baseline Hypothesis," Economic Journal, Royal Economic Society, vol. 118(529), pages F222-F243, 06.
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Rani Spiegler on Neuroeconomics
"In this short note I speculate about the various ways in which the study of neurological aspects of decision making could be fruitful for economic modelling."
http://www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/~uctprsp/neuro.pdf
Ireland's woes
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6638711.stm
http://gearybehaviourcenter.blogspot.com/2007/05/begorrah.html
"But has this prosperity come at a price?" they wondered. Apparently so, particularly for the farmers, experimental rock musicians and returning emigrant from Mexico (who was particularly worried about all the immigrants in Ireland!) the journalist interviewed. Ireland, it seemed had lost its soul.
Contrast this with the latest assessment of Ireland from a bbc journalist. Our "house of cards" has come tumbling down apparently. The folks at Smithson's diner in Drogheda are racked with worry. The article notes about the area: "During the unprecedented boom years, the population here grew by a third. Now, it is an unemployment black-spot - ringed by new developments with empty, unsold houses."
Its a pity that the farmer, experimental rock musician and returning Mexican emigrant from the last article weren't reinterviewed as whatever problems seemed like last year, I doubt this is going to be an improvement. I should be fair to them as none of them specifically blamed prosperity but the moral of the article to me seemed to that prosperity had reduced welfare and I argued then that more thought needed to be given to what had improved, in particular the positive effect of reduced unemployment.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7689789.stm
For obvious reasons, the debate about the role of economic progress in wider well-being has been on my mind a lot recently. There is some evidence (particularly from the suicide rate) that the Celtic Tiger prosperity was not unambiguously positive. However, it looks like we will now get a chance to see what the other side is like. I've posted evidence before that some aspects of health may improve if there is to be a recession and it may also be the case that people's focus on wealth and consumerism as a source of status may be undermined, which may be good depending on what you read. However, the literature on the negative effect of unemployment, farm failure, business failure, home repossession and other negative features of recession on psychological outcomes seems too overwhelming to me to think of this slowdown as anything but a bad thing. In some sense, this may be one the challenges of the next few years - to break the link between economic slowdown and the psychological trauma experienced by people who lose their jobs and status.
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Suicide and Well-Being
paper link
Economic Recessions and Well-Being
I have been looking through the literature for papers that specifically deal with the effect of recessions on well-being. i am working on various projects this weekend and will post sporadically on these topics.
The review below by Blanchflower and several other papers point to a negative effect of unemployment on well-being both at individual and aggregate level.The paper by Wolfers below shows that both unemployment and inflation lower well-being and also finds an effect of volatility with more volatility independently lowering well-being. In general, I have not come across papers that argue against a causal effect of unemployment on well-being but would be interested to read any if I have missed them.
Wolfers, Justin, 2003. "Is Business Cycle Volatility Costly? Evidence from Surveys of Subjective Well-Being," International Finance, Blackwell Publishing, vol. 6(1), pages 1-26, Spring. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
David G. Blanchflower, 2008. "International evidence on well-being," NBER Working Papers 14318, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
In terms of the effects of economic fluctuations, the relationship between gdp and well-being is still being debated strongly. Recent papers by Wolfers have argued against the Easterlin paradox, which claimed to demonstrate that economic progress beyond a certain point did not raise well-being.
Betsey Stevenson & Justin Wolfers, 2008. "Economic Growth and Subjective Well-Being: Reassessing the Easterlin Paradox," NBER Working Papers 14282, National Bureau of Economic Research
While the debate might be shifting toward the side of gdp being a positive influence on well-being, the literature on suicide and gdp, in my opinion, is certainly not conclusive. In the Irish case, one only has to look at the last 20 years to know that suicide need not reduce during dramatic economic improvements and was, in fact, increasing at its highest rate in Ireland at the time of the most dramatic improvements in economic conditions we had witnessed. This is something that needs to be explained further.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Do you ever wonder what proportion of email is spam?
A new IZA working paper by Caliendo, Clement, Papies and Scheel-Kopeinig reports that more than 70% of global e-mail traffic consists of unsolicited and commercial direct marketing (also known as "spam"). From an economic point of view, the authors point out that dealing with spam incurs high costs for organisations. The logical response? To reduce spam-related costs by installing spam filters.
Caliendo et al are interested in the selection bias associated with installing a spam filter. Using data from a German university, they measure the (time use) costs associated with spam, and the costs savings of spam filters. Their findings indicate that central IT costs are of little relevance since the majority of spam costs stem from employees who spend working time identifying and deleting spam. Also, the working time lost due to spam is approximately 1,200 minutes per employee per year. Caliendo et al suggest that these costs could be reduced by roughly 35% through the installation of a spam filter mechanism.
As another alternative, people could switch to email providers with inbuilt spam filters (automatic filtering perhaps...). I never get spam in my Gmail inbox; and emails that I want to receive there are never blocked.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
The truth about Joe the plumber
The Real Plumbers of Ohio
'Joe the Plumber' says he has no plumbing license
The Effects of Weather on Daily Mood
Using a multi-level approach they find "Sunlight had a main effect on tiredness and mediated the effects of precipitation and air pressure on tiredness. These individual differences in weather sensitivity could not be explained by the Five Factor Model personality traits, gender, or age."
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
A bit more meat than your €1 sandwich
(Thanks to Paul for the story)
By Chris Burritt
Oct. 22 (Bloomberg) -- McDonald's Corp., the world's largest restaurant company, said third-quarter profit rose 11 percent as consumers stretched by higher food costs bought $1 double cheeseburgers... ``McDonald's is one of those great plays at this point in time,'' Keith Wirtz, the chief investment officer at Fifth Third Asset Management, told Bloomberg Television. Customer visits to restaurants are slowing ``with one exception, and that's in the fast-food category.''
To contact the reporter on this story: Chris Burritt in Greensboro, North Carolina, at +1-336-808 1348 or cburritt@bloomberg.net.
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
The Fed Discusses Behavioural Economics
Irish SHARE
http://geary.ucd.ie/share/index.php
The website above has links to the first results of the Irish study as well as an article written about them in the Sunday Tribune. Some highlights of the results include the chronic illness distributions, early retirement data and many other findings. Various researchers will be following up on this over the next few years
Monday, October 20, 2008
nobel website interview with Fogel
http://nobelprize.org/mediaplayer/index.php?id=689&view=3
Anchoring Vignettes - Calm Down Dearest
The examination of individuals’ satisfaction with their job, how they rate their health, or any similar question - is measured through the subjective interpretation of a survey question. This is the context for why “anchoring vignettes” are important - they make self-reported levels of satisfaction, or health, comparable across different individuals. Self-reported levels of satisfaction are not usually comparable because individuals interpret survey questions differently and report levels of satisfaction subjectively. The anchoring vignettes technique is used to:
(i) measure incomparability by asking respondents to assess hypothetical scenarios described in short vignettes
(ii) correcting the incomparability through re-coding or the use of a statistical model
A typical example that is used to illustrate the comparability problem is self-rated health. Individuals who receive better healthcare may rate their health to be lower than individuals who receive worse healthcare. The assumed reason is that individuals who receive better healthcare have 'higher standards' for what constitutes 'good health'. This link leads to Gary King's website on anchoring vignettes. It includes academic papers, vignette examples, links to software, a FAQ, and much more besides about anchoring vignettes. There are also links to two of King's path-leading papers on the method:
Gary King, Christopher J.L. Murray, Joshua A. Salomon, and Ajay Tandon. "Enhancing the Validity and Cross-cultural Comparability of Survey Research," American Political Science Review, 97, 4 (December, 2003); reprinted with printing errors corrected, February, 2004.
Gary King and Jonathan Wand. Comparing Incomparable Survey Responses: New Tools for Anchoring Vignettes, Political Analysis, 15, 1 (Winter, 2007): Pp. 46-66.
A scenario demonstrating the usefulness of vignettes came to mind before when I was listening to "Calm Down Dearest", a song written by Jamie T, a performer from Wimbledon in South London. He defeated Jarvis Cocker and Thom Yorke to win the Best Solo Artist at the 2007 Shockwave NME Awards, and his debut album (the aptly titled 'Panic Prevention') was shortlisted as one of the 12 nominees for the Mercury Prize.
"Calm Down Dearest" documents Jamie's attempts to uncover the true self-rated health of his friend, given that his friend has a consuming cocaine habit. This may just be the interpretation of somebody who has read too much about anchoring vignettes, but you can listen for yourself using the video below. The chorus documents Jamie's frustration with the self-report problem:
"Its heavy, its on my mind; that you say you feel just fine.
Racking and stacking your lines, I said calm down dearest"
Potential Positive Health Effects of Recessions
Gerdtham, Ulf-G. & Ruhm, Christopher J., 2006. "Deaths rise in good economic times: Evidence from the OECD," Economics and Human Biology, Elsevier, vol. 4(3), pages 298-316, December. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
Christopher J. Ruhm, 2000. "Are Recessions Good For Your Health?," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, MIT Press, vol. 115(2), pages 617-650, May. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
Ruhm, Christopher J., 2005. "Healthy living in hard times," Journal of Health Economics, Elsevier, vol. 24(2), pages 341-363, March. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
Healthy Living in Hard Times
Using microdata for adults from 1987 to 2000 years of the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), I show that smoking and excess weight decline during temporary economic downturns while leisure-time physical activity rises. The drop in tobacco use occurs disproportionately among heavy smokers, the fall in body weight among the severely obese and the increase in exercise among those who were completely inactive. Declining work hours may provide one reason why behaviors become healthier, possibly by increasing the non-market time available for lifestyle investments. Conversely, there is little evidence of an important role for income reductions. The overall conclusion is that changes in behaviors supply one mechanism for the procyclical variation in mortality and morbidity observed in recent research.
Irish SHARE results
here
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Alternative Methods for Evaluation - Costas-Dias and Blundell
http://www.fep.up.pt/investigacao/cete/papers/DP0805.pdf
Health Ratings
The rankings are based on three years of data from Medicare and are adjusted to account for how sick the hospital's patients are... Consumers can look up the HealthGrade rankings by state and by condition.... Overall, HealthGrades says patients have a 70 percent lower chance of dying in a five-star hospital compared with a hospital with a one-star ranking.
Online Social Networks, Again
One of the most popular new tools is Twitter, a ... messaging service that allows its ... users to broadcast to their friends haiku-length updates — limited to 140 characters... — on what they’re doing. There are other services for reporting where you’re traveling (Dopplr)... And there are even tools that give your location. When the new iPhone, with built-in tracking, was introduced in July, one million people began using Loopt, a piece of software that automatically tells all your friends exactly where you are.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Can PhD Graduate Labour Supply Create Its Own Demand?
Apparently the rapid increase in graduating PhDs in recent years indicates that the employment patterns of PhDs might be changing. "Further research is needed to answer questions like: How has the increased supply changed the labour market situation of PhDs? Has the role of the private sector as an employer of PhDs changed? And is the allocation of PhDs between fields of study efficient?" Similar issues were placed in the Irish context last year by myself, Liam and Colm - in this B&F article: "Building Up The PhDs".
Apparently Ireland's R&D manpower, in terms of full time equivalent (FTE) researchers per 10,000 labour force (49), is below the EU-15 average. This is according to the Singapore Agency for Science, Technology and Research. Information is available here and in the diagram below. Ireland's position is third from the right hand-side. The position of the EU-15 average is at the far right-hand side.

A question arises - what kind of R&D manpower does Ireland need outside the academic and public sector? One approach is to estimate the need for PhD graduates in the private sector via a survey of employers. Some things we do know (from research conducted by Eamonn O'Raghallaigh at Life Science Recruitment) are that:
(i) employment in the pharmaceutical/chemical sector has increased by 56% over the last 10 years, and there is currently over 24,500 employees within the sector.
(ii) In the medical devices/biotechnology sector, some 140 companies employ over 26,000 employees.
(iii) exports in the pharmaceutical/chemical sector totalled €43.5 billion in 2007; this represents 49% of total Irish exports
(iv) the medical devices/biotechnology sector saw a slight downturn in 2007, with exports falling by 2% to €3 billion
A leading education economist (Anna Vignoles) argued last year (here) that universities should set student tuition fees according to how much a degree subject is valued by employers. An interesting first step might be to see if such information can be gathered from employers. If it was subsequently estimated that there is not much need for more PhD graduates in the private sector, then one implication might be to consider ways of stimulating demand for R&D manpower. But the first step is to get the demand-side information.
Monday, October 13, 2008
Review of Nudge
here
Thursday, October 09, 2008
Irish Undergraduate Journal
http://www.iuawards.ie/site/
What's the placebo effect worth?
Waber RL, Shiv B, Carmon Z, Ariely D. Commercial features of placebo and therapeutic efficacy. JAMA 2008;299:1016-7.
A second more recent study by Kaptchuk et al. (2008)has shown a 'dose dependence' of placebo effects on pain relief dependent on if the patient was assigned to a waiting list (observation), placebo acupuncture alone ("limited"), or placebo acupuncture with a patient-practitioner relationship augmented by warmth, attention, and confidence ("augmented"). The proportion of patients reporting adequate relief were 28% on waiting list, 44% in limited group, and 62% in augmented group (P<0.001 for trend).
So it does appear that the placebo effect is still with us despite calls for it's demise though separating the effects of therapeutic rituals, patient-practitioner interaction, observation/assessment (or the “Hawthorne effect”, initially describing “an increase in worker productivity produced by the psychological stimulus of being singled out and made to feel important”) or investment in ones health, an explanation which seems plausible from the Ariely study.
Criminal Prosecution and HIV-related Risky Behavior
Delavande,Goldman and Sood (2008) are the first to empirically investigate the potential consequences of prosecutions for HIV transmission. They use U.S. inter-state variation in prosecution rate, from a limited sample of just 316 prosecutions for this crime and categorise states into those with 'strict' or 'non-strict' enforcement of laws which would permit prosecution. They then use a nationally representative survey of the sexual risk behaviours of 1,400 people with HIV to see is there a relationship between state type and risk behaviour. Interestingly, they find that in 'strict' states safe sex is practiced more often by those with HIV as is abstinence. They go on to claim that transmission rates should be 'responsive to agressive prosecution' and if the prosectution rate for HIV is doubled then the number of new infections will be reduced by a third in 10 years.
Looking at the figures I don't think it can control fully for the effects of the 'elephant in the room' in this paper which is that those in stict states are more likely to visit prostitutes and more than twice as likely not to disclose their HIV status to any of their last 5 partners. It is very difficult to know the extent of the knock on effects this can have on new infections and it may indeed wipe out the potential effects of more safe sex and more abstinence, the latter which probably shouldn't be the goal for a HIV intervention anyway. However, we have to be very careful before advocating criminalisation in the case of HIV transmission and framing the argument in term of a welfare enhancing 'tax on risky behaviour' could have some dangerous consequences down the line both in terms of the welfare of those with HIV and the number of new infections criminalisation may cause. Because criminalisation may disincentivise testing it is also difficult to separate this effect from the potential effect it may have on reducing new infections. More work on this is definitely needed but it is worth noting that WHO and European Commission guidelines going back three decades have stated that it is an ethical obligation on the part of those with HIV to disclose to potential or existing partners, but that this should not translate into a legal obligation as such legislation would be 'inappropriate ad impractical'.
Anticipated Regret, Commitment Devices and the Email "Breathalyser"
Read more here on the Gmail blog.
Economic Correlates of Suicide
A very recent working Paper of KOF Swiss Economic Institute investigates how economic conditions are associated with age-sex group specific suicide rates in a panel of 28 OECD countries over the period 1980-2002. They consider the trend and cyclical components of income, unemployment, income inequality, inflation, as well as various socio-demographic control variables.
Estimating models in first diferences, and noting that their results depend on whether stationarity properties are adequately accommodated or not, they find that the cyclical component of income is negatively associated with suicide rates of men, while unemployment primarily affects suicide rates of women. Moreover, their estimations show that the effects of the cyclical component of income and unemployment are most pronounced in OECD countries with low public social security spending.
The paper can be found @ http://www.kof.ethz.ch/publications/science/pdf/wp_207.pdf
Wednesday, October 08, 2008
forecastingprinciples.com
Book Club: A Theory of Justice, by John Rawls
It is not possible to get the book for free online, at least to the best of my knowledge (I've looked all over the place). Given this, let's just forget about the fact that there are two revised editions (1975 and 1999). Whatever people get their hands on will have to do. Bear in mind that this is not a bad tome to have on your bookshelf - it's often referred to as the best work in political philosophy of the last century (at least that's what I have been reading about it this evening). For those reluctant to splash out, you can read extracts (though not print) thanks to Google and Oxford Press: here
Some Background Information:
John Rawls (February 21, 1921 – November 24, 2002) was an American philosopher, a professor of political philosophy at Harvard University and author of A Theory of Justice (1971), revised in 1975 and 1999. Rawls was a recipient of the Schock Prize for Logic and Philosophy and the National Humanities Medal in 1999, the latter presented by President Bill Clinton, in recognition of how Rawls's thought "helped a whole generation of learned Americans revive their faith in democracy itself."
According to Robert Cavalier (Carnegie Mellon) and Charles Ess (Drury College), "Rawls's theory of justice revolves around the adaptation of two fundamental principles of justice which would, in turn, guarantee a just and morally acceptable society. The first principle guarantees the right of each person to have the most extensive basic liberty compatible with the liberty of others. The second principle states that social and economic positions are to be (a) to everyone's advantage and (b) open to all.
A key problem for Rawls is to show how such principles would be universally adopted... He introduces a theoretical "veil of ignorance" in which all the "players" in the social game would be placed in a situation which is called the "original position." Having only a general knowledge about the facts of "life and society," each player is to make a "rationally prudential choice" concerning the kind of social institution they would enter into contract with. By denying the players any specific information about themselves it forces them to adopt a generalized point of view that bears a strong resemblance to the moral point of view."
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
EdLabs
A time allocation study of university faculty
...This paper investigates the at-work allocation of time among teaching, research, grant writing and service by science and engineering faculty at top US research universities. We focus on the relationship between tenure (and promotion) and time allocation, and we find that tenure and promotion do affect the allocation of time. The specific trade-offs are related to particular career paths. For example, full professors spend increasing time on service at the expense of teaching and research while longer-term associate professors who have not been promoted to full professor spend significantly more time teaching at the expense of research time. Finally, our results suggest that women, on average, allocate more hours to university service and less time to research than do men.
Monday, October 06, 2008
Mostly Harmless Econometrics
DON'T PANIC! The core methods in today's econometric toolkit are linear regression for statistical control, instrumental variables methods for the analysis of natural experiments, and differences-in-differences methods that exploit policy changes.
This is the refrain of Joshua Angrist and Steve Pischke in the preface to their new book: "Mostly Harmless Econometrics". A preview is available here. My econometrics professor, Paul Devereux, tells me that there are many references throughout to the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. There is also a range of "Mostly Harmless" t-shirts for sale; see below for a sample!
Wordle
Does Cortisol Help Us To Regulate Our Emotions?
Low levels of the stress hormone cortisol could be linked to antisocial behaviour in adolescent boys, UK researchers say...
An increase in cortisol levels is thought to make people behave more cautiously, and help them to regulate their emotions, particularly their temper and violent impulses.
But (the) Cambridge university study found this did not happen in boys with a history of severe antisocial behaviour.
Read comments from lead researcher Dr. Graeme Fairchild on MedIndia.com here.
Sunday, October 05, 2008
Happiness for Beginners
The IDEAS/REPEC pages of the following people is a good place to begin (others in Economics include Bruno Frey, Robert Frank, Gary Becker, Bernard Van Praag, Arie Kapteyn and you will find their homepages easily with the assistance of Google or IDEAS).
Alois Stuzer
David Blanchflower
Daniel Kahneman
Andrew Clark
Andrew Oswald
Economics of Happiness is a sub-classification also on the New Economic Papers and these are well worth consulting for whats currently happening in the field.
http://ideas.repec.org/n/nep-hap/
Some books that are worth consulting include (abbreviated titles)
Diener: Culture and Subjective Well-Being
Kahenman et al: Foundations of Hedonic Psychology
Richard Layard Happiness
Frey and Stutzer: Economics and Happiness
Thursday, October 02, 2008
Farewell to Bubbles? For Now...
The recent era of the speculative investment bubbles may be at an end, says one of the world's pre-eminent bubble-watchers.
Robert Shiller, who predicted both the tech and housing flameouts with near-perfect accuracy, says it may be a generation before the world sees another major bubble -- such is the damage wrought by the U. S. housing bust.
Psychology, the key ingredient that drives all bubbles, simply will not be upbeat enough to foster a new mania.
More available here in the Financial Post.