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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 the research
    was initially received
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    and how they responded
    to criticism.
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    At the time, did you feel like
    you are on to something,
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    you felt like 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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    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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    We proved something be proved up
    that people didn't know before,
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    that it was worth knowing.
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    Yeah, going back compared to my
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    job market papers having--
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    I felt this was actually a very clear crisp result.
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    But there were definitely
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    was mixed reception and I don't
    think anybody said that,
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    "Oh, wow, this is already,
    something."
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    No, which is the nightmare scenario for a researcher
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    where you think you've discovered
    something and then somebody else,
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    says, "Oh, I knew that."
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    But there were definitely was a need to
    convince people that this was worth knowing,
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    that instrumental variables estimates
    a causal effect for compliers.
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    Yeah, but even though it
    took a long time to convince
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    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, because at that point Josh had left for Israel,
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    but I remember explaining it to Don Ruben
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    and he was like, "Yeah, this really is something here."
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    Not right away though.
    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 but that
    took longer than I think you remember.
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    Yeah, it wasn't right away
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    [laughter]
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    because I know that I was back in
    Israel by the time that happened.
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    I'd left for Israel in the summer--
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    I was only at Harvard for two years.
    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 were initially quite receptive,
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    perhaps took some time for
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    a broader group of people to come
    around to
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    seeing the LATE framework
    as a valuable way to look at the world.
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    I guess, in over the
    course of that, did you
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    were their periods
    where you thought,
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    maybe the people
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    saying this wasn't a useful way 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
    but the people who were saying
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    that we're smart people, well informed metricians,
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    sophisticated readers
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    and I think the substance
    of the comment was,
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    this is not what econometrics is about.
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    Econometrics was 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 it 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
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    once people were started
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    arguing more more vocally against that,
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    that never really bothered me that much.
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    It seems clear that we had a result there
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    and it was 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 what 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,
    the more upset--
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    there was some dinner where someone said,
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    "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'd 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] But it wasn't so bad.
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    I think the criticism is--
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    It wasn't completely
    misguided, it was maybe wrong.
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    No, no, but you can
    say the paper is wrong
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    but it's saying that it's a disservice to
    the profession, that's not really--
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    Personal.
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    Yes, and doing that, not to me,
    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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    Right.
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    It's one thing to say
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    you're estimating the effect of
    treatment on the treated 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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    Yeah.
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    But it's a 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 very useful thing to realize.
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    I remember on the day,
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    we got to the key result that I was thinking,
    "Wow, this is as good as it gets.
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    Here we actually have an insight
    but clearly--"
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    And we had to sell it.
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    For quite a few years, we had to sell
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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, I did feel early on this was
    a substantial insight.
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    - [Josh] Yeah we [learned] 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 that lead people to be better at
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    recognizing the good stuff 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
    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 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
    that it wasn't formulated very clearly,
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    and we came up with a way to do that in
    the potential outcomes framework
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    that I think worked
    for the three of us.
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    Yeah, 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, okay well, I've got this language
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    and this 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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    "Wow, but here you thinking of it this way,"
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    but that's actually a pretty hard thing to do,
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    get someone from a different discipline,
    convincing them,
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    two junior faculty in a different department
    actually have something to say to you,
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    that's that takes a fair amount of effort.
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    Yeah, I wrote on a number of times, 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
    that would validate the framework to some extent.
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    I think both you and Don were a little
    bit more confident that you were right.
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    Well, we used to argue a lot 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 getting a little testy once,
    we had lunch in The Faculty Club
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    and we're talking about the draft lottery paper.
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    we were talking about never takes
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    as people wounded serve in
    the military irrespective of
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    whether they were getting drafted
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    and you and Don said something
    about shooting yourself in the foot,
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    as a way of getting out of the military
    and that may be the exclusion restriction
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    for never takes wasn't working
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    and then the other one would say,
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    "Well, yes you could do that
    but why would you want to shoot yourself in the foot?"
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    [laughter]
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    It got a little [inaudible] there.
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    I usually go for moving to Canada for my example
    when I'm teaching that.
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    But he thinks it's tricky,
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    I get students coming
    from computer science and they want to do
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    things on causal inference
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    and it takes a huge amount of
    effort to figure out how
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    they actually thinking about problem
    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 for the fact that Don
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    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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    and rather than dismissing
    and say,
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    "Well, okay I can't figure out what these guys are
    doing and it's probably just not really that
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    that interesting."
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    Everybody always wants to
    figure out quickly,
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    you want to save time and you want to save
    your brain cells for other things.
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    The fastest route to that is to figure
    out 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 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.
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    If you'd like to learn more
    about Guido, Josh, and Isaiah
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    check out the links in the description.
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    ♪ [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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