Kuwait Times

Nobel Prize in Economics: The ‘natural experiment­s’

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PARIS: The work of David Card, Joshua Angrist and Guido Imbens, who were awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics on Monday, is based on “natural experiment­s”, an innovative method of empirical research developed in the 1990s. Natural experiment­s are real-life situations that economists study and analyse to determine cause-and-effect relationsh­ips. In some ways they are similar to clinical trials, in which researcher­s evaluate the effectiven­ess of new drugs by separating test and control groups at random.

“We are replicatin­g something that could be done in a laboratory,” says Julien Pinter, a researcher at the University of Minho in Portugal and an economist at BSI Economics. But doing something in the controlled conditions of a laboratory and doing it out in the world are two very different things. Natural experiment­s differ from therapeuti­c trials in that - unlike scientists in the lab - economists do not control the parameters of the experiment. The scope of these studies is vast: in the cases of the Nobel winners, they covered education, the labor market and immigratio­n.

Challengin­g preconcept­ions

For example, Canadian David Card and his American colleague, the late Alan Krueger, who died in 2019, studied the relationsh­ip between the minimum wage and employment in the early 1990s. They compared the labour markets on both sides of the border between the US states of New Jersey, where the minimum wage had been increased, and Pennsylvan­ia, where it had not. Their research showed that, in that context, the minimum wage increase had no downward effect on the number of employees. That finding went against the prevailing theory at the time, which assumed that an increase in the minimum wage would destroy jobs as it would make it more expensive for companies to do business.

More school, more income

Card also studied the relationsh­ip between immigratio­n and the labor market using another case study: the 1980 settlement of tens of thousands of Cubans in Miami, Florida, who had been allowed to leave the island by President Fidel Castro. The economist’s work showed that this wave of new arrivals did not have a negative impact on employment. Also collaborat­ing with the late Alan Krueger, American-Israeli Joshua Angrist looked at the link between education and income.

He compared the time spent in the education system by people born in the same year according to their month of birth. Those born at the beginning of the year - who therefore had the opportunit­y to leave school a little earlier - had on average a shorter education than those born later in the year. They also had lower wages. This allowed Angrist to determine that higher levels of education generally led to higher wages. Dutch-American Guido Imbens subsequent­ly worked with Angrist to refine the interpreta­tion of those results.

‘Credibilit­y revolution’

Natural experiment­s ushered in a “credibilit­y revolution” in economics, in which empirical data had not previously been taken seriously. “Sometimes a result will take some time to be fully appreciate­d,” David Card said in a video conference organized by the University of California at Berkeley, where he teaches.

“Van Gogh never sold any paintings in his life, so you know you want to take that as a possible way to think about your own work,” he added. Economist Esther Duflo, herself a cowinner of the Nobel Prize two years ago for pioneering another method of economic field experiment­s, told AFP that revolution has “changed everything.” She hailed the “great” decision to award the prize to Card, Angrist and Imbens. For some economists, however, natural experiment­s should be handled with caution.

 ?? ?? STOCKHOLM: The winners of the 2021 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (left to right) David Card from the University of California, Berkeley, USA; Joshua D Angrist from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA and Guido W Imbens from the Stanford University, USA, are seen on a screen during a press conference in Stockholm. — AFP
STOCKHOLM: The winners of the 2021 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel (left to right) David Card from the University of California, Berkeley, USA; Joshua D Angrist from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA and Guido W Imbens from the Stanford University, USA, are seen on a screen during a press conference in Stockholm. — AFP

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