Categories
Critique of Mainstream Economics Economics Nobel In the media Klassekampen

FT letter: The economist’s blind spot

I recently wrote a Letter in the Financial Times (snippet above) on the limits to Daron Acemoglu’s argument about liberalism, technology and the working class. You can read the full Letter here and Acemoglu’s original piece here.

I also recently wrote a related (but longer) op-ed on the mainstream understanding of technological development in the Norwegian newspaper Klassekampen. Read it here.

Categories
Critique of Mainstream Economics Decolonizing Economics Economics Nobel Imperialism Methodology

New commentary: The Nobel Fetish

In response to the announcement of the Economics Nobel being awarded to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt, I wrote a commentary for Economic and Political. Here is the commentary and you can download the PDF here.

Read a Norwegian version here.

Categories
Critique of Mainstream Economics Decolonizing Economics Economics Nobel

The Colonial Origins of Economics (new commentary)

In response to the announcement of the Economics Nobel being awarded to Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson (commonly referred to as “AJR”), I wrote a commentary for Economic and Political weekly with my co-authors Surbhi Kesar and Devika Dutt.

Here is the link to the piece and you can download the PDF for free here.

You can also read the piece in French, Persian and Portuguese.

Categories
Critique of Mainstream Economics Economic Development Economics Nobel Experimental Economics Publications

New article: Nobel Rebels in Disguise — Assessing the Rise and Rule of the Randomistas

I just published a new article in the Review of Political Economy, “Nobel Rebels in Disguise — Assessing the Rise and Rule of the Randomistas,” which assesses the theoretical and empirical foundations of the use of randomised control trials in Economics, and its impact on policy debates in development economics and in the aid industry.

Categories
Critique of Mainstream Economics Economic Development Economics Nobel Experimental Economics Publications

Impoverished Economics? A Critical Assessment of the New Gold Standard (new essay)

I wrote an essay for the World Development Symposium on Development and Poverty Alleviation. Here is the abstract:

This article situates the 2019 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel in the history of thought on development, tracing how the focus, theory and methods have shifted in the field. The article evaluates theoretical and methodological critiques of the way randomized control trials (RCTs) are employed by the laureates, as well as attempts to overcome these challenges. In terms of theory, the article demonstrates what gets lost when experiments are guided by methodological individualism and assumptions of individual utility-maximizing behavior. In terms of methodology, the article unpacks the limits of RCTs related to their causal model, and their lack of attention to human agency and wider socio-economic context. Finally, the article discusses the experimental approach’s relevance for research and policy-making and cautions against any approach becoming a “gold standard,” due to the importance of pluralism for maintaining an open debate about development.

Read the full article here and do check out the other essays as well.

Categories
Blog Development Finance Economic Development Economics Nobel NSER

Blog post: Why Isn’t The World Bank’s Choice of Chief Economist More Controversial?

Paul

I wrote this piece for The New School Economic Review (NSER) blog.