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Best of #econtwitter - Nobel 2021 special edition

An Economist
Oct 14, 2021
Share this post
Best of #econtwitter - Nobel 2021 special edition
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Throwback Thursday: 2020 Nobel special edition

The prize

Twitter avatar for @NobelPrizeThe Nobel Prize @NobelPrize
BREAKING NEWS: The 2021 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel has been awarded with one half to David Card and the other half jointly to Joshua D. Angrist and Guido W. Imbens. #NobelPrize
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October 11th 2021

5,991 Retweets12,945 Likes
Twitter avatar for @sarahmroseSarah Rosenberg @sarahmrose
@JustinWolfers I wonder if the inability to let Krueger share in this prize posthumously might not be why they assigned shares...if it had been all 4, it would have been equally shared. 50/50 could be a nod to his absence, since we all know it's really "Card & Krueger" + "Angrist & Imbens"

October 11th 2021

1 Retweet38 Likes

(^though)

Threads

Twitter avatar for @JustinWolfersJustin Wolfers @JustinWolfers
Short version of the prize: We used to dig into the data, say "correlation ain't causation," quickly forget we said that, and make a bunch of causal-ish statements based on data that really couldn't support such claims.

October 11th 2021

39 Retweets273 Likes
Twitter avatar for @arthurbnettoArthur Netto @arthurbnetto
It’s been some time since my last tweet, but a timely Nobel Prize came as a call for a thread! I’ve just defended my PhD thesis "Experiments in the Armchair: A History of Microeconometrics and Program Evaluation at Princeton". I follow Ashenfelter and his mentees up close in it!

October 12th 2021

169 Retweets636 Likes

^recommended, related paper

Twitter avatar for @AfinetheoremKevin Bryan @Afinetheorem
Afraid I am working on a new project in Dakar on sabbatical and am under the weather, so no full AFT post this year about the Nobel. But, a few bagatelles about an obvious prize, and also one that is widely misunderstood (but not by the winners, that's for sure!)

October 12th 2021

26 Retweets79 Likes
Twitter avatar for @mushfiq_econAhmed Mushfiq Mobarak @mushfiq_econ
On the occasion of today's #Economics @NobelPrize awarded for methodologies to uncover causality in non-experimental situations, I want to share a thought with other adjacent fields of academia that rely on empirical evidence: public health, medicine, other social sciences.

October 11th 2021

91 Retweets493 Likes
Twitter avatar for @sstern_mitScott Stern @sstern_mit
LATE is an advance that, even when stated clearly, is not "obvious" even after you see it. It makes you think carefully about exactly what a regression identifies (a weighted average of heterogeneous effects) and the implicit assumptions pervading empirical analysis (10/n)

October 11th 2021

4 Retweets33 Likes
Twitter avatar for @ek_obergErik Öberg @ek_oberg
The “credibility revolution”, started in labor and education. Today, the methods and practice of causal analysis that Card, Angrist and Imbens pioneered have penetrated all fields of economics. Some beautiful examples of exploiting natural experiments from my home turf, macro:

October 11th 2021

94 Retweets368 Likes
Twitter avatar for @salva_latSalvatore Lattanzio @salva_lat
David Card's contribution to the minimum wage literature is big, but it's not his only contribution to economics. One of his more recent contribution is on wage inequality and the role played by firms. A thread [1/12] 👇 #NobelPrizeEconomics #EconTwitter
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October 11th 2021

65 Retweets205 Likes

MR

Twitter avatar for @ATabarrokAlex Tabarrok @ATabarrok
A Nobel Prize for the Credibility Revolution--David Card, Joshua Angrist and Guido Imbens. My writeup at Marginal Revolution
A Nobel Prize for the Credibility Revolution - Marginal REVOLUTIONThe Nobel Prize goes to David Card, Joshua Angrist and Guido Imbens. If you seek their monuments look around you. Almost all of the empirical work in economics that you read in the popular press (and plenty that doesn’t make the popular press) is due to analyzing natural experiments using techniques…marginalrevolution.com

October 11th 2021

130 Retweets352 Likes

Nobel Prize meta

Twitter avatar for @ben_golubBen Golub @ben_golub
Imagine you give a prize for achievement, and you also have some values you care about promoting. It seems like it wouldn't be optimal for you to give the prize based exclusively on achievement all the time. The prize earns reputation with the strongest winners, 1/

October 5th 2021

6 Retweets46 Likes
Twitter avatar for @akbarpour_Mohammad Akbarpour @akbarpour_
I think they should stop giving Nobel prizes to people and instead give them to papers. I don’t want to celebrate someone’s career, I want celebrate the event of discovering an unknown that was waiting to be known.

October 8th 2021

18 Retweets164 Likes
Twitter avatar for @JustinWolfersJustin Wolfers @JustinWolfers
This year's prize reaffirms a trend we've seen for years: If you want to win the Prize, you've got to win the next generation of graduate students. Teach them tools that they can use to push back the frontier. Each of these guys has trained a veritable army of graduate students.

October 11th 2021

13 Retweets191 Likes

Fluff

Twitter avatar for @instrumenthullPeter Hull @instrumenthull
Nobody: Nobel laureate:
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October 12th 2021

694 Retweets4,751 Likes
Twitter avatar for @Austan_GoolsbeeAustan Goolsbee @Austan_Goolsbee
@NobelPrize Remembering when Josh Angrist moonlighted as an Uber driver to get info for a paper (he got low ratings b/c passengers said he asked them too many questions). Rando drunk Boston ppl driven around by a Nobel laureate studying incentives and human behavior is <kiss-fingers>

October 11th 2021

148 Retweets887 Likes
Twitter avatar for @SydneeCaldwellSydnee Caldwell @SydneeCaldwell
@Austan_Goolsbee @NobelPrize He was also objectively bad. Look at Figure 5A of our paper. The random detour on the waterfront was, I am told, not part of the route. Unclear Josh knows that's the trip receipt I chose to put in....

October 11th 2021

10 Retweets129 Likes
Twitter avatar for @EmilyNix100Emily Nix @EmilyNix100
Good thing Josh Angrist won that Nobel Prize today and won't have to rely on his backup career of Uber driver, since apparently, it was not his comparative (or absolute tbh looking at this map😂) advantage.
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Sydnee Caldwell @SydneeCaldwell

@Austan_Goolsbee @NobelPrize He was also objectively bad. Look at Figure 5A of our paper. The random detour on the waterfront was, I am told, not part of the route. Unclear Josh knows that's the trip receipt I chose to put in....

October 11th 2021

4 Retweets39 Likes
Twitter avatar for @rothstein_jesseJesse Rothstein @rothstein_jesse
Shachar Kariv, the Berkeley economics department chair, just reminded me that David is no longer allowed to win the department’s best advisor award, to give others a chance.

October 11th 2021

2 Retweets64 Likes
Twitter avatar for @SimonBowmakerSimon Bowmaker @SimonBowmaker
David Card on becoming an economist... Full interview:
simonbowmaker.com/s/Card.pdf
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October 11th 2021

24 Retweets156 Likes
Twitter avatar for @OwenOzierOwen Ozier @OwenOzier
To celebrate the #NobelPrize awarded in part for 'methodological contributions to the analysis of causal relationships', please enjoy econometrics and causal inference memes and poems created by the @WilliamsEcon undergraduates! #EconTwitter
owenozier.github.io/teaching/2020-…
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October 11th 2021

79 Retweets463 Likes
Twitter avatar for @Andrew___BakerAndrew Charles Baker @Andrew___Baker
The only thing I’ll say about the Nobel is that Guido Imbens taught me the most important lesson in grad school. Namely that you can actually be extremely smart and successful while also being an absurdly nice person.

October 11th 2021

119 Retweets2,025 Likes
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