The Big Ideas

Do I really think that the things I write about here and in my papers are the most important things in the world? No. Like most academics, I tend to emphasize the issues where I think I bring a unique perspective, rather than most important issues. But if you don’t realize this, you might get the impression that I think the things I normally talk about are the most important, rather than simply the most neglected and tractable / publishable. I don’t work on the most important issues because I see no good way for me to attack them- but if you do see a way, that is where you should focus. So what are the big issues of the 2020’s?

I see two issues that stand out above the many other important events of the day:

  • Artificial Intelligence: At minimum, the most important new technology in a generation; has the potential to bring about either utopia or dystopia. Do you have ideas for how to nudge it one way or another?
  • Rise of China: From extreme poverty to the world’s manufacturing powerhouse in two generations. What lessons should other countries learn from this for their own economic policy? How can we head off a world war and/or Chinese hegemony?

Focusing a bit more on economics, I see two perennial issues where there could be new opportunities to solve vital old questions:

  • Economic Development: We still don’t have a definitive answer to Adam Smith’s founding question of economics- why are some countries rich while other countries are poor, and how can the poor countries become rich? I think economic freedom is still an underrated answer, but even if you agree, the question remains of how to advance freedom in the face of entrenched interests who benefit from the status quo.
  • Robust Prediction: How can we make economics into something resembling a real science, one where predictions that include decimal places don’t deserve to be laughed at? Can you find a way to determine how much external validity an experiment has? Or how to use machine learning to get at causality? Or at least push existing empirical research to be more replicable?

I’ve added these points to my ideas page, since all this was inspired by me talking through the ideas on the page with my students and realizing how small and narrow they all seemed. Yes, small and narrow ideas are currently easier to publish in economics, but there is more to research and life than easy publications.

New Website

Don’t worry, EWED is in the same place as always, but my personal website is moving.

Temple University has generously hosted my site long after my 2014 graduation. But next week they are moving to a more typical policy where alumni lose access to online university resources like web-hosting, email, and library datasets starting one year after graduation.

My new personal website is at jamesbaileyecon.com. Unless you just trying to learn more about me or my research, I think the big draws are the pages where I share cleaned-up datasets and ideas for research papers.

The Economics of Taylor Swift

Cowen’s 2nd Law states that there is a literature on everything. I would certainly expect there to be a literature on the best-selling musician in the world. And of course there is; Google Scholar returns 23,500 results for “Taylor Swift”, and we’ve done 5 posts here at EWED. But surprisingly, searching EconLit returns nothing, suggesting there are currently no published economics papers on Taylor Swift, though searching “Taylor” and “Swift” separately reveals hundreds of articles about the Taylor Rule and the SWIFT payment system. Google Scholar does report some economics working papers about her, but the opportunity to be the first to publish on Taylor Swift in an economics journal (and likely get many media interview requests as a result) is still out there.

Swift presents a variety of angles that could be worthy of a paper; re-recording her masters forcopyright reasons, her efforts to channel concert tickets to loyal fans over re-sellers, or her sheer macroeconomic impact. I’ve added a note about this to my ideas page (where I share many other paper ideas).

In the mean time, I’ll be giving a short talk on the Economics of Taylor Swift at 7pm Eastern on Monday, September 16th, as part of a larger online panel. The event is aimed at Providence College alumni, but I believe anyone can register here.

Update 10/25/24: A recording of the event is here, and a recording of a followup interview I did with local TV is here.