Why the 2021 Nobel Prize in Economics is so Important
The 2021 Nobel Prize in Economics was given to David Card, Joshua Angrist, and Guido Imbens for their work in using observational data and natural experiments to help us understand…
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The 2021 Nobel Prize in Economics was given to David Card, Joshua Angrist, and Guido Imbens for their work in using observational data and natural experiments to help us understand…
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by Bruce Wydick and Kent Annan, appearing in Christianity Today online 10/23/20 Particularly in this time of global pandemic, we want to know how to care for our local and…
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Recently my coauthors and I finished a CEGA working paper for a research project that fell into the category of one of those “dying to know if this popular thing…
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The only way to feel worse about the impacts of COVID-19 than talking to people in public health is to talk to people in business and economics. Macroeconomists often tell…
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Microcredit has arguably been through more ups and downs than virtually any modern poverty intervention. For decades up through the 1980s, the thought was that the poor would never repay…
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We as development economists are poverty “experts” in many respects. We are experts at talking and writing about poverty. We are experts at developing mathematical models that explain poverty. And…
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(Excerpt from the introduction to the book–now available July 2019.) It’s been my experience that most people have a genuine desire to help the poor—including the poor in their communities…
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A great number of life’s important questions are causal questions. Whether we are a parent trying to choose the best school for our child, a physician pondering the best approach…
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Beginning about four years ago, microcredit as an effective poverty intervention seemed dead, or at least on life support. Along with a couple of earlier studies, the six famous randomized…
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Recently I had the opportunity to take part in a webinar that discussed the status of microcredit, specifically whether or not researchers believe it works. To complement a piece on…
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It’s Giving Tuesday, a day that has become prominent enough in our culture to make us either give, feel guilty about not giving, or come up with a powerful, self-justifying…
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When giving talks to college students at different universities, I find that most students are looking to align their lives with a cause greater than themselves. Among these, many could…
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From the San Francisco Chronicle, Online July 13, Print July 15, 2018 The Trump administration repeatedly makes two claims to justify its crackdown on immigrants and their families: 1) Immigrants…
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Published in Christianity Today, 11/27/2017 Ryan Loofbourrow is a homelessness guru, a recognized leader in the urban poverty field. He is also my brother-in-law. During the holidays, we have been…
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Written for the World Bank Impact Blog, May 21, 2018 It isn’t hard to understand why Andrew Leigh would write a book on randomized controlled trials. A kind of modern…
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by José Gutierrez, Police Officer, Oakland, CA Police Department and Bruce Wydick, Professor of Economics, University of San Francisco Stephon Clark. Michael Brown. Freddie Gray. Alton Sterling. Keith Scott. Compliments…
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Another cycle around the sun and here we are again, the season of New Year’s resolutions, the time when we resolve not to do the stuff we were disappointed that…
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This Story Appears in Christianity Today, December 2017 (Print Edition) One year, instead of buying my dad the usual unattractive necktie for Christmas, we bought him a goat. He loved…
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For the past several years, a number of co-authors and I have been working on a series of projects that have explored the relationship between the psychology of poverty and…
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It’s not often that a book comes along that is delightfully written, hilariously funny, and at the same time may change your life. But At Home in Exile (Zondervan) by Russell…
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Does hope need to be based in reality for it to help facilitate movements out of poverty? Recently my co-authors and I (Travis Lybbert and Irvin Rojas at UC Davis)…
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I want to devote this post to a new tool that I have begun to use with colleagues in program and policy evaluation, the digital coding of children’s drawings. An…
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(Published in Christianity Today Online October 25, 2016) The Parable of the Good Samaritan is so well-known to Christians that we often forget that it was given in response to…
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I enjoy helping NGOs with designing ways to carry out impact evaluations within the context of their normal operations. David Evans of the World Bank and I wrote a piece for…
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Why I Cannot (Fully) Embrace Effective Altruism
One of the most popular schools of thought in global ethics today is a movement called Effective Altruism. Founded on the work of Princeton philosopher Peter Singer, it draws heavily…