Gerhard Fehr

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Gerhard Fehr

Gerhard Fehr

@Gerhard_Fehr

Executive #BehavioralDesign /er, Delegierter des VR @FehrAdvice #UncoveringBlindSpots #Experimentability #BehavioralEconomics

Zürich Katılım Mayıs 2009
4.3K Takip Edilen6.2K Takipçiler
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Reto Lipp
Reto Lipp@retolipp·
Ein durchschnittlicher US-Haushalt hat vermutlich 1100 Dollar mehr wegen den Zôllen 2025 bezahlt. Dieses Jahr steigt das auf 1500 $. (Affordability crises) #bringthemoneyback
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Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter
Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter@Elisabeth_S_S·
Bilaterale? Gefährlich. Dynamische Rechtsübernahme? Unzumutbar. EU-Anbindung? Auf keinen Fall. Ausser natürlich im Geschäftsmodell. Wünsche einen schönen Sonntag. ⁦@SVPch
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Maximilian Kasy
Maximilian Kasy@maxkasy·
What is the intersection of machine learning, causal inference, and economics? What are promising avenues for research at this intersection? I just drafted a new talk exploring these questions: maxkasy.github.io/home/files/sli… Thoughts and comments welcome!
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Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter
Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter@Elisabeth_S_S·
🇨🇭 Die Halbierungsinitiative klingt nach Sparen – ist aber ein Risiko. Weniger ⁦⁦@SRGSSR⁩ heisst: weniger verlässliche Information, mehr Polarisierung, weniger Zusammenhalt. Wer Verantwortung trägt, sagt Nein zur Halbierungsinitiative. 🇨🇭
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Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter
Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter@Elisabeth_S_S·
Dass sich Gantner in der Öffentlichkeit als zentraler Akteur inszeniert und dabei die Glaubwürdigkeit des Bundesrates untergräbt, zeigt vor allem: Hier geht es nicht in erster Linie um Zölle – sondern um eine eigene politische Agenda. bazonline.ch/strafzoelle-ve…
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Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter
Elisabeth Schneider-Schneiter@Elisabeth_S_S·
Rund 75% der BL- Stimmberechtigten haben sich gestern bei den Ersatzwahlen in den Regierungsrat für europafreundliche Kandidierende ausgesprochen. Das zeigt: Die Bevölkerung will eine vernetzte und zukunftsgerichtete 🇨🇭 – auch im Verhältnis zu Europa. bzbasel.ch/basel/basellan…
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Peter Hull
Peter Hull@instrumenthull·
More posts like this please
Jesús Fernández-Villaverde@JesusFerna7026

Let me explain why I believe modern economics is such a powerful tool for understanding the world. I’ll do this by discussing a great paper by Simone Cerreia-Vioglio, @UncertainLars, Fabio Maccheroni, and Massimo Marinacci, “Making Decisions Under Model Misspecification,” published in the Review of Economic Studies a few months ago. Imagine I want to drive from UC San Diego to UCLA, but I’ve never driven that route before. I need to build a “model of the world” to guide me, which we usually call a map. Maps are simplified representations of reality. They can’t include every detail if they’re to be useful. Borges, in his short story On Exactitude in Science, makes this point beautifully. (In practice, I don’t draw the map myself—I use an app—but someone still had to make it.) Because maps simplify, I can’t fully rely on them. Maybe last night’s storm knocked down a tree and closed a street, or there’s construction and the ramp off the highway in LA is shut down. This uncertainty matters. Suppose I’m driving to UCLA for an important talk at 11 a.m. If the ramp is closed, I might need 15 extra minutes. When should I set my alarm to arrive on time, while still getting enough sleep to give a good talk? The problem is that I can’t assign precise probabilities to all these contingencies. How likely is the fallen tree? Or new roadwork? Even the best traffic apps can’t capture every disruption, and some might happen after I’ve already left. In economic terms, my “model of the world” (the map) is misspecified—and no matter how hard I try, I can’t fully fix that. But sitting down and crying about misspecification doesn’t answer my basic question: when do I set the alarm? Too early, and I’m exhausted. Too late, and I’m late. Simone and his co-authors offer a way to think about this. They start from the idea that we often hold several structured models of an economic phenomenon, grounded in theory. For example, a central bank might use a standard New Keynesian model and a search-and-matching model of money. Yet, aware that each model is misspecified by design, the bank adds a protective belt of unstructured models—statistical constructs that help it gauge the consequences of misspecification. The beauty of the paper is that it provides an axiomatic foundation for this protective belt (and even generalizes it to include a Bayesian approach). It shows that if a decision-maker’s preferences meet certain conditions —reflecting both rational and behavioral features— then those preferences can be represented by an augmented utility function that formally accounts for misspecification. Crucially, we don’t assume that augmented utility function; we derive it. We start with general, plausible properties of preferences and prove that they imply such a representation. That’s real progress. Instead of writing endless critiques of expected utility or rational expectations (as many have done for decades, with little to show), we now have a formal way to reason about misspecification—precise definitions, clear boundaries of validity, and awareness of what we still don’t know. Take, for instance, a brilliant Penn graduate student on the market, Alfonso Maselli economics.sas.upenn.edu/people/alfonso… His job-market paper pushes this frontier further. He studies cases where a decision-maker not only faces model misspecification but is also unsure which model best fits the data and can’t assign probabilities to them—what we call model ambiguity. In my example, the central bank is unsure whether the New Keynesian or the search-and-matching model fits better, and it worries that both might be incorrect. If you read Simone et al. or Alfonso’s paper, you’ll see how misguided—and, frankly, cartoonish—many of the recent criticisms of economics on X have been. First: the idea that economists don’t understand math or have “physics envy.” The math in these papers is subtle and advanced—utterly different from what physicists do (neither better nor worse, just distinct). An engineer transitioning into economics would find these tools unfamiliar. Second: claims of ideological bias are unfounded. I have no idea about the political views of the authors, and I’d be surprised if anyone could infer them from the analysis—beyond vague guesses about typical academics. Third: This has almost nothing to do with what one learns as an undergraduate, or even in first-year graduate school. If your knowledge of economics stops at an intro textbook, it’s best not to pontificate on the field’s frontiers. Fourth: Is this science? Debating that word’s boundaries is pointless; every definition of “science” breaks down somewhere. The Germans solved this long ago with the idea of Wissenschaft—the systematic pursuit of knowledge, whether of nature, society, or the humanities. By that measure, modern mainstream economics is clearly a Wissenschaft: a disciplined, cumulative, and highly useful effort to understand how the world works. Simone and his co-authors have demonstrated that beyond any reasonable doubt.

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Stefanie Stantcheva
Stefanie Stantcheva@S_Stantcheva·
"To understand America today, study the zero-sum mindset." My piece in @TheEconomist this week on how zero-sum thinking arises and why it matters so much for policy and politics. Based on our research at the Social Economics Lab. economist.com/by-invitation/…
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Rudi Bachmann
Rudi Bachmann@BachmannRudi·
Ich habe gerade mit der @SZ zum Thema Wirtschaftskompetenz geredet und dabei auf den Unterschied zwischen Business und Economics bestanden, der mich ja immer noch skeptisch re @_FriedrichMerz macht. Aber was hier gerade abgeht, die Unkenntnis von Politik und Demokratie in der
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Rudi Bachmann
Rudi Bachmann@BachmannRudi·
Startup / Techbro Szene, die ist so erschreckend, dass man nur davor warnen kann, die auch nur in die Nähe politischer Macht zu lassen (falls jemand von Elmo echt noch nicht genug hat). Und das gilt selbst dann, wenn diese Startups erfolgreiche Businesses sind.
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Rudi Bachmann
Rudi Bachmann@BachmannRudi·
Gerade dann, denn dann würde ja sogar das noch gefährdet sein, wenn die stattdessen Demokratie kaputt machen. Und ich bin mir noch nicht mal sicher, ob es Böswilligkeit ist (bei einigen schon), das wirklich Schockierende ist die Unkenntnis.
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-l-@notrouble12345·
Heute bekommt @DAcemogluMIT den #NobelPrize. Kurz vorher konnte ich ihn für ein Interview treffen. Es hat es in sich: Acemoglu sieht in den liberalen Demokratien den "Geburtsschmerz eines neuen Modells"; D. rät er dringend, die Schuldenbremse zu lockern: faz.net/aktuell/wirtsc…
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