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Pushing New Ideas (Guido Imbens, Josh Angrist, Isaiah Andrews)

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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    - [Narrator] Welcome
    to Nobel Conversations.
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    In this episode, Josh Angrist
    and Guido Imbens
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    sit down with Isaiah Andrews
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    to discuss how their research
    was initially received
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    and how they responded
    to criticism.
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    - [Isaiah] At the time,
    did you feel like
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    you were on to something,
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    you felt this was the beginning
    of a whole line of work
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    that you felt like was going
    to be important or...?
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    - [Guido] Not so much
    that it was a whole line of work,
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    but certainly, I felt like,
    "Wow, this --"
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    - [Josh] We've proved something
    we didn't know before,
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    that it was worth knowing.
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    - Yeah, going back to the...
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    compared to my job market
    paper or something --
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    No, I felt this was actually
    a very clear, crisp result.
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    - But there was definitely
    a mixed reception,
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    and I don't think
    anybody said that,
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    "Oh, well, this is
    already something
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    which is the nightmare scenario
    for a researcher,
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    where you think
    you've discovered something
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    and then somebody else says,
    'Oh, I knew that.'"
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    But there definitely was
    a need to convince people
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    that this was worth knowing,
    that instrumental variables
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    estimates a causal effect
    for compliers.
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    - Yeah, but even though
    it took a long time
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    to convince a bigger audience,
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    sometimes even fairly quickly,
    the reception was pretty good
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    among a small group of people.
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    Gary clearly liked it a lot
    from the beginning,
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    and I remember...
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    because at that point
    Josh had left for Israel,
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    but I remember explaining it
    to Don Rubin,
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    and he was like, "You know,
    this really is something here."
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    - Not right away though.
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    Don took some convincing.
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    By the time you got to Don,
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    there have been
    some back and forth with him
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    and in correspondence, actually.
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    - But I remember at some point
    getting a call or email from him
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    saying that he was sitting
    at the airport in Rome
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    and looking at the paper
    and thinking,
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    "Yeah, no, actually,
    you guys are onto something."
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    - We were happy about that.
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    But that took longer
    than I think you remember.
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    It wasn't right away.
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    [laughter]
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    Because I know
    that I was back in Israel
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    by the time that happened.
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    I'd left for Israel
    in the summer of --
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    I was only at Harvard
    for two years.
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    We had that one year.
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    It is remarkable, I mean, that
    one year was so fateful for us.
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    - [Guido] Yes.
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    I think we understood there was
    something good happening,
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    but maybe we didn't think it was
    life-changing, only in retrospect.
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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    - [Isaiah] As you said, it sounds
    like a small group of people
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    were initially quite receptive.
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    It perhaps took some time
    for a broader group of people
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    to come around to seeing
    the LATE framework
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    as a valuable way to look
    at the world.
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    I guess, in over
    the course of that,
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    were there periods
    where you thought
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    maybe the people saying
    this wasn't a useful way
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    to look at the world were right?
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    Did you get discouraged?
    How did you think about?
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    - I don't think I was discouraged,
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    but the people who were saying that
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    were smart people,
    well-informed econometricians,
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    sophisticated readers,
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    and I think the substance
    of the comment
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    was this is not what
    econometrics is about.
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    Econometrics being transmitted
    at that time was about structure.
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    There was this idea that
    there's structure in the economy,
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    and it's our job to discover it,
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    and what makes its structure
    is it's essentially invariant.
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    And so we're saying,
    in the LATE theorem,
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    that every instrument produces
    its own causal effect,
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    which is in contradiction to that
    to some extent.
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    And so that was
    where the tension was.
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    People didn't want
    to give up that idea.
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    - Yeah, I remember once
    people started
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    arguing more vocally
    against that --
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    that never really
    bothered me that much.
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    It seemed clear that
    we had a result there,
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    and it became somewhat
    controversial,
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    but controversial in a good way.
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    It was clear that people felt
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    they had to come out
    against it because --
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    - Well, I think we think
    it's good now.
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    We might not have loved it
    at the time.
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    - I remember being
    somewhat more upset --
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    there was some dinner
    where someone said,
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    "No, no, no,
    that paper with Josh --
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    that was doing a disservice
    to the profession."
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    - We definitely had
    reactions like that.
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    - At some level, that may be
    indicative of the culture
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    in general in economics
    at the time.
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    I thought back later,
    what if that happened now?
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    If I was a senior person
    sitting in that conversation,
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    I would call that out because
    it really was not appropriate.
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    - [Josh] It wasn't so bad.
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    I think the criticism is...
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    It wasn't completely misguided.
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    It was maybe wrong.
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    - No, no, but you can say
    that paper is wrong,
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    but it's saying that
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    it's a disservice
    to the profession --
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    - that's not really...
    - [Isaiah] It's a bit personal.
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    - Yes, and doing that not to me
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    but in front of
    my senior colleagues.
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    - But nobody was saying
    the result was wrong,
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    and I remember also,
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    some of the comments
    were thought-provoking.
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    So we had some negative reviews,
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    I think, on the average
    causal response paper.
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    Somebody said, "These compliers --
    you can't figure out who they are."
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    It's one thing to say
    you're estimating
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    the effect of treatment
    on the treated
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    or something like that.
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    You can tell me who's treated.
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    People in the CPS,
    you can't tell me who's a complier.
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    So that was a legitimate challenge.
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    - That's certainly fair,
    and I can see why
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    that part made people
    a little uneasy and uncomfortable.
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    But at the same time,
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    because it showed that you couldn't
    really go beyond that,
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    it was a very useful thing
    to realize.
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    I remember on the day
    we got to the key result
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    that I was thinking,
    "Wow, this is as good as it gets.
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    Here we actually have
    an insight, but it clearly..."
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    - And we had to sell it
    at some point.
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    For quite a few years,
    we had to sell it,
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    and it's proven to be quite useful.
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    I don't think we understood that
    it would be so useful at the time.
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    - No.
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    I did feel early on
    this was a substantial insight.
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    - [Josh] Yeah, we'd done something.
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    - But I did not think
    goals were there.
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    - I don't think we were aiming
    for the Nobel.
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    [laughter]
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    We were very happy to get
    that note in Econometrica.
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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    - [Isaiah] Are there factors
    or are ways of approaching problems
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    that lead people to be better
    at recognizing the good stuff
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    and taking the time to do it
    as opposed to dismissing it?
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    - [Josh] Sometimes
    I think it's helpful.
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    If you're trying
    to convince somebody
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    that you have something
    useful to say
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    and maybe they don't
    speak your language,
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    you might need
    to learn their language.
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    - Yes, yes, exactly.
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    - That's what we did with Don,
    we figured out how to --
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    I remember we had a very hard time
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    explaining the exclusion
    restriction to Don,
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    maybe rightfully so.
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    I think Guido and I
    eventually figured out
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    that it wasn't formulated
    very clearly,
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    and we came up
    with a way to do that
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    in the potential outcomes framework
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    that I think worked
    for the three of us.
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    - [Guido] Yeah.
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    Well, it worked
    for the bigger literature,
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    but I think what you're saying
    there is exactly right.
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    You need to figure out
    how not just say,
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    "Okay, I've got this language,
    and this works great,
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    and I've got to convince
    someone else to use the language."
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    You could first figure out
    what language they're using,
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    and then, only then,
    can you try to say,
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    "Well, but here you're thinking
    of it this way."
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    But that's actually
    a pretty hard thing to do.
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    You get someone
    from a different discipline,
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    convincing them, two junior faculty
    in a different department
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    actually have something
    to say to you --
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    that takes a fair amount of effort.
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    - Yeah, I wrote Don
    a number of times,
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    in fairly long letters.
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    I remember thinking
    this is worth doing,
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    that if I could convince Don,
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    that would validate
    the framework to some extent.
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    - I think both you and Don
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    were a little bit more confident
    that you were right.
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    - Well, we used to argue a lot,
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    and you would sometimes
    referee those.
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    [laughter]
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    That was fun.
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    It wasn't hurtful.
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    - I remember it getting
    a little testy once.
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    We had lunch in The Faculty Club,
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    and we were talking about
    the draft lottery paper.
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    We were talking about "never takes"
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    as people wouldn't serve
    in the military
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    irrespective of whether
    they were getting drafted,
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    and you or Don said something
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    about shooting yourself
    in the foot...
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    [laughter]
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    ...as a way of getting out
    of the military
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    and that maybe
    the exclusion restriction
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    for "never takes" wasn't working.
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    And then the other one was going,
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    "Well, yes, you could do that,
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    but why would you want
    to shoot yourself in the foot?"
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    [laughter]
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    It got a little there...
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    - I usually go for moving
    to Canada for my example,
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    when I'm teaching that.
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    [laughter]
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    - But things are tricky.
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    I get students coming
    from Computer Science,
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    and they want to do things
    on causal inference,
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    and it takes a huge amount
    of effort to figure out
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    how they're actually thinking
    about a problem
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    and whether
    there's something there.
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    And so, now, over the years,
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    I've got a little more appreciation
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    for the fact that Don
    was actually willing to --
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    It took him a while,
    but he did engage first with Josh
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    and then with both of us,
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    rather than dismissing and saying,
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    "Okay, well, I can't figure out
    what these guys are doing,
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    and it's probably just
    not really that interesting."
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    - Everybody always wants
    to figure out quickly.
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    You want to save time,
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    and you want to save
    your brain cells
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    for other things.
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    The fastest route to that
    is to figure out
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    why you should dismiss something.
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    - Yes.
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    - I don't need
    to spend time on this.
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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    - [Narrator] If you'd like
    to watch more Nobel Conversations,
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    click here.
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    Or if you'd like to learn
    more about econometrics,
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    check out Josh's
    Mastering Econometrics series.
  • 10:22 - 10:25
    If you'd like to learn more
    about Guido, Josh, and Isaiah,
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    check out the links
    in the description.
  • 10:27 - 10:29
    ♪ [music] ♪
Title:
Pushing New Ideas (Guido Imbens, Josh Angrist, Isaiah Andrews)
ASR Confidence:
0.83
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Duration:
10:31

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