Alex Clymo

910 posts

Alex Clymo banner
Alex Clymo

Alex Clymo

@alexclymo

Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Essex. On leave at the Banque de France and Paris School of Economics.

🇬🇧 / 🇫🇷 Entrou em Ekim 2009
1.7K Seguindo573 Seguidores
Alex Clymo retweetou
Gustavo Ventura
Gustavo Ventura@King_ofSweden·
A depressing picture of the market for PhD economists. Job postings down by more han 26% relative to 2019 (down by about 25% relative to 2022). Via @cawley_john
Gustavo Ventura tweet media
English
10
44
255
51.3K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Uni Essex Economics Dept
Uni Essex Economics Dept@UoE_Economics·
We are thrilled to announce that both Pavlos Balamatsias & Camila Comunello have been awarded the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Economics today! 🥳 Massive congratulations to both Dr Comunello and Dr Balamatsias on this momentous achievement.👏🙌#PhD #economics #essexresearch
Uni Essex Economics Dept tweet mediaUni Essex Economics Dept tweet media
English
0
6
20
1.6K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Naomi Clayton
Naomi Clayton@NaomiClaytonUK·
🧵 on Get Britain Working and why it matters The rise in people out of work due to ill health (up 1/3 to 2.8m in LFS) is mirrored in admin data on benefits. The no. of people claiming out-of-work benefits due to sickness or disability has increased by ~1m since 2020 to 3.2m
Naomi Clayton tweet media
English
1
8
7
1.6K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Benjamin Schoefer
Benjamin Schoefer@Schoefer_B·
Excited to share a new paper w/ Matthias Mertens: From Labor to Intermediates: Firm Growth, Input Substitution, and Monopsony We document, dissect, understand, draw consequences of a new stylized fact about firm growth: the shift from labor to intermediate inputs. Summary:
Benjamin Schoefer tweet media
NBER@nberpubs

A new stylized fact about firm growth: The shift from labor to intermediate inputs reflects high substitution elasticity and monopsony and pushes down the labor share, from Matthias Mertens and @Schoefer_B nber.org/papers/w33172

English
2
32
152
28.9K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Leonard Bocquet
Leonard Bocquet@LeonardBocquet·
👋 Hi #EconTwitter! I'm happy to share that I'm on the job market this year. 🚀 In my JMP, I explore an important question: How fast do labor market adjust to technological shocks, like robots or AI? Curious? Quick thread below 👇
English
1
58
254
48.3K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Jason Furman
Jason Furman@jasonfurman·
I know many skeptics of prediction markets. I don't have an ideological faith in them (OK, maybe quasi ideological). But the empirical evidence is they have worked really, really, really well. And did again on Tuesday night. A short 🧵 about this remarkable picture.
Jason Furman tweet media
English
36
281
1.6K
498.5K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Sander Tordoir
Sander Tordoir@SanderTordoir·
Why does innovation not translate into commercialisation in Europe? This is not only about a lack of VC funding, links between uni's and businesses. The problem for him is also demand-led: EU firms can’t grow so they don’t get financed, and then leave to the US. 5/
English
3
15
164
12.3K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Sander Tordoir
Sander Tordoir@SanderTordoir·
First, “Europe must profoundly refocus its collective efforts on closing the innovation gap with the US and China, especially in advanced technologies” Draghi pointed out in the presser that if you strip out its tech sector, US productivity growth has been similar to Europe. 4/
English
1
21
207
12.7K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Alisdair McKay
Alisdair McKay@AlisdairMcKay·
I’ve done a big update of my notes on computation for heterogeneous-agent macro. They start with the endogenous grid method and end with by solving a HANK model using sequence space Jacobians. Codes are in Julia. alisdairmckay.com/Notes/HetAgent…
English
0
96
444
39.8K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Pontus Rendahl
Pontus Rendahl@pontus_rendahl·
Our summer school is filling up, and we will shortly close for applications. If there are any latecomers we can squeeze in a few more people before July. So if you know anyone that might be interested please RT! Thanks so much for all help and support! 🙏 You are all stars! 💫
Pontus Rendahl@pontus_rendahl

In 2024, Petr Sedlacek (@SedlacekPe) and I are again running the summer school "Tools for Macroeconomists". For more info and registration, pleases see (our brand new) webpage: sites.google.com/view/tools-for… Course runs 5-9 (essentials) and 12-16 of August (advanced) Some news 👇🧵1/5

English
0
19
33
17.2K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Paul Novosad
Paul Novosad@paulnovosad·
The takeaway is not: "more robustness checks." The takeaway is: "authors cannot be trusted to run their own robustness checks." We need fewer referee demands for robustness, and more replication by scholars who have no incentives to cheat.
Doug Campbell@TradeandMoney

How credible was the "credibility revolution"? How robust is empirical research in economics? We just replicated a year's worth of the American Economic Review & had economists predict robustness. Here's what we learned. econstor.eu/handle/10419/2…

English
6
20
215
24.4K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Cory Doctorow NO LONGER ON TWIT TER
In "The Scorpion and the Frog," a trusting frog gives a scorpion a ride across a brook, only to be stung to death by his passenger upon arrival. The dying frog gasps "why?" and the scorpion replies, "I am sorry, but I couldn't resist the urge. It's my character." 1/
GIF
English
12
175
489
110.2K
Alex Clymo retweetou
Tony Wilson
Tony Wilson@tonywilsonIES·
Truly awful jobs data today. Employment, economic inactivity as bad as depths of pandemic. The data is VERY volatile so don't read too much into short-term changes, but trend is clearly poor. And I think it shows it's the labour market holding back growth - not other way round...
Tony Wilson tweet media
English
13
58
138
58.6K
Alex Clymo retweetou
David Phillips
David Phillips@PhillipsEcon·
Corollary: if I can't make the graph, I probably don't actually understand what the regression is estimating.
English
1
2
32
3.6K
Alex Clymo retweetou
David Phillips
David Phillips@PhillipsEcon·
A couple thoughts tangentially related to the EJ/JPopEcon replication discussion, both on how I learned to minimize mistakes and be a more careful reader of reduced form work. Maybe useful for early career people.
English
3
15
87
33.6K