Penn‘s Exchange: Markets & Cooperation
Science:Social Sciences
To measure is to know. That has been science's dictum since the industrial revolution. But what happens when our measurement estimates are wrong? Today we will be joined by Timothy Guinnane. He will talk to us about how inaccurate the world's historical population estimates are and the general implications for economics, demography, and social sciences.
Mark Koyama on the Economics of Dune and Science Fiction Worlds
Alex Salter on the Medieval Constitution of Liberty
Anna Grzymala-Busse on the Sacred Foundations of European States
John H. Cochrane on the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level
Enrico Spolaore on Political Borders and the Size of Nations
Maarten Prak & Jan Luiten van Zanden on Pioneers of Capitalism: The Economic History of the Netherlands
Ennio Piano on The Economics of Renaissance Art
Oyebola Okunogbe on Ethnic Integration in Nigeria
Yuhua Wang on the Rise and Fall of Imperial China
James McAndrews on Narrow Banking
Maria Pia Paganelli on the Relevance of Adam Smith Today
Alejandro Martínez-Marquina on the Economic Impact of Winning theLottery
Anne Beck Knudsen on Migration and Cultural Change in Scandinavia
Bryan Cutsinger on Money and Banking in Antebellum America
Oded Galor on the Journey of Humanity: The Origins of Wealth and Inequality
Nathan Nunn on the Dynamics of Beliefs, Tradition, and Change
Jesús Fernández-Villaverde on the Incoming Demographic Collapse
Michela Giorcelli on the Impact of Management on Productivity
Michael Andrews on Innovation & its Social Underpinnings
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