The Nobel prize in economics celebrates an empirical revolution
David Card shares this year’s award with Joshua Angrist and Guido Imbens
A “CREDIBILITY REVOLUTION” has transformed economics since the 1990s. Before that, theory ruled the roost and empirical work was a poor second cousin. “Hardly anyone takes data analysis seriously,” declared Edward Leamer of the University of California, Los Angeles, in a paper published in 1983. Yet within a decade, new and innovative work had altered the course of the profession, such that the lion’s share of notable research today is empirical. For enabling this transition David Card of the University of California at Berkeley shares this year’s economics Nobel prize, awarded on October 11th, with Joshua Angrist of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Guido Imbens of Stanford University.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Instrumental research”
Finance & economics October 16th 2021
- Wages are surging across the rich world
- Germany’s workers are in the strongest position in 30 years
- The IMF decides to keep its boss
- Another upward force on American inflation: the housing boom
- A new study finds that dirty money remains easy to hide
- Chinese companies suffer an intense cash crunch in offshore bond markets
- Credit-card firms are becoming reluctant regulators of the web
- How to think about the unstoppable rise of index funds
More from Finance & economics
Do tariffs raise inflation?
Usually. But the bigger problem is that they harm economic growth and innovation
European governments struggle to stop rich people from fleeing
Exit taxes are popular, and counter-productive
Saba Capital wages war on underperforming British investment trusts
How many will end up in Boaz Weinstein’s sights?
Has Japan truly escaped low inflation?
Its central bankers are increasingly hopeful
How American bankers dodged the MAGA carnage
The masters of the universe have escaped an anti-globalist revolt
China’s financial system is under brutal pressure
When will something break?