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Abducting Economics

By James J. Heckman and Burton Singer

American Economic Review, May 2017

Abduction is the process of generating and choosing models, hypotheses, and data analyzed in response to surprising findings. All good empirical economists abduct. Explanations usually evolve as studies evolve. The abductive approach challenges economists...

Economic Research Evolves: Fields and Styles

By Joshua Angrist, Pierre Azoulay, Glenn Ellison, Ryan Hill, and Susan Feng Lu

American Economic Review, May 2017

We examine the evolution of economics research using a machine-learning-based classification of publications into fields and styles. The changing field distribution of publications would not seem to favor empirical papers. But economics' empirical shift i...

Does Money Illusion Matter?

By Ernst Fehr and Jean-Robert Tyran

American Economic Review, December 2001

This paper shows that a small amount of individual-level money illusion may cause considerable aggregate nominal inertia after a negative nominal shock. In addition, our results indicate that negative and positive nominal shocks have asymmetric effects be...