By. 007

Who'll get the Nobel Prize in Economics 2020?

The truth is that there is no Nobel Prize in Economics, yet it is the most prized of the Nobels. Winners of these prizes often acquire the voice of god in the intellectual discourse of nations.
What is thought of as the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, is officially the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in memory of Alfred Nobel. It is administered by the Nobel Foundation established by the Swedish inventor of dynamite.
The prize was established in 1968 by a donation from Sweden's central bank to commemorate the bank's 300th anniversary. It is now easily the most awaited of the Nobels. To know who will get in in 2020, we will have to wait till tomorrow.
The winners last year, Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, won it ironically enough for their study in eastern Orissa of one the most spectacular development economic bombs of recent times. It was a scheme to replace open-fire cooking used by 3
billion of the world’s poorest people with more efficient, less polluting stoves. The $400 million project was backed by the United Nations and launched by former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2010. It set out to reduce indoor air
pollution, which kills 2 million people a year, while empowering women and helping the environment. After initial success, millions of stoves built in India were largely abandoned within four years.
Banerjee and Duflo studied the reasons for it and told the world why such an altruistic and even rational project flopped. The reasons were quite mundane, something which the worlds finest development economics and policy making minds did not anticipate.
The new stoves needed more attention, prone to break down and took longer to cook food. They couldn’t be moved because they were tethered to fixed chimneys sending the smoke outside. I don’t think Narendra Modi’s genius factored the more mundane
considerations when the government of India launched its colossal public toilets scheme, which we now know is also a spectacular flop. Open defecation is once again rampant. Its little wonder that Modi has given the duo a big avoid.
But the economics Nobel winners also spawned spectacular flops. The hedge fund Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) had a plan to apply the expert knowledge and theories of academics to the real world. The collapse of this $125 billion fund directly led to the 1997
Asian financial crisis and the 1998 Russian default that brought the financial world to the brink of collapse. LTCM had recruited some of the biggest names in economics and trading, hiring people like the 1997 winners of the Nobel Prize for Economics Myron S.
Scholes and Robert C. Merton to sit on their board of directors. But the combined brilliance of the top academics and high flying bankers couldn’t spot the coming disaster. Both, failures highlighted an inability to understand how common people behave.
Classical economics was linked closely with psychology. Adam Smith’s other great work was “The Theory of Moral Sentiments” and dealt with the psychological principles of individual behavior. Smith emphasized concept of empathy, the capacity to recognize
feelings that are being experienced by another being. Jeremy Bentham described utilitarianism as it is the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of right and wrong" and is considered by many as the father of the welfare state. Classical
economic theory, also known as laissez faire, claims that leaving individuals to make free choices in a free market results in the best allocation of resources. Since individuals made choices the emphasis was on understanding human beings and their
behavior as individual and as groups.

Neo-classical economists based their thinking on the assumptions that people have rational preferences; individuals maximize utility and firm’s profits; and people act independently. Consequently neo-classical economists distanced
themselves from psychology and sought explanations for economic analysis heavily based on the concept of rational expectations. For most of the last century economics became increasingly mathematical. Much of economic theory came to be presented as mathematical models, mostly
calculus, to clarify assumptions and implications.

It is not as if the switch was complete. Many great economists like Vilfredo Pareto, John Maynard Keynes and Joseph Schumpeter continued to base their analysis on psychological explanations. In more recent times this
school of economics has been given greater importance and is reflected in the award of Nobel Prizes to behavioral economists like Daniel Kahneman of Princeton University and to Richard Thaler at Chicago. Banerjee and Duflo are considered development
economists but the focus of their research was in how beneficiaries looked at gift horses.

The dominance of the classical school on the world of economics can be gauged by the fact that since the relatively recent inception of the Nobel
Prize in Economics in 1968, the Chicago economics department faculty have won the Nobel as many as twelve times, twice as many as MIT, which has six Nobel laureates. Seen from Harvard University’s ivory tower even MIT is considered as leaning more towards
classical economic theory. Recent Harvard winners for economics such as Oliver Hart (2016), Alvin Roth (2012) and Eric Maskin (2007) were rewarded for their work based on mathematical empiricism than behavioral speculation. Amartya Sen (1998) was one of the few
who broke this mould and won it in recognition of his work and abiding interest in welfare economics. A well-known economist explained that Sen won it for being a good person.

Every politician worth his salt knows that national mood and perceptions are
decisive in determining national outcomes. And often people do not always make rational choices, something that marketers of diverse products such as automobiles and soap, and political dreams know.
But economists took their time recognizing this, and the Nobel Committee even longer.
By 007

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More from @RavikanthS_

10 Oct
#HBDRakulPreetSingh #mentalhealthday

Private Sector is better.

7 out of the 10 telecom companies have shut business and gone home leading to job losses.
All airline companies are in distress. Jet Airways shut down with 18,000 jobs as direct loss and ten times more as indirect loss. The banks too took a hit, same with King Fisher. Every other airline is struggling. Some have been declared by their auditors as no longer a
going concern, that means capital is completely eroded.

In UK, railways privatized over 30 years ago are in a mess. The government is now planning to take over and reverse the decision.

Subhash Chandra is out of Zee Television due to his massive debt.
Read 9 tweets
9 Oct
#BrahminLivesMatter #CheGuevara
Why are so many youth unemployed?

The fault lies in following a one-size-fits all approach of our education.

We have given vocational education a miss. We give the same dose (syllabus) of education to all and sundry.
The lad from the village is given the same does as the kid from a city. Our education system is deeply flawed. So deep that it creates youth with the same skill set.

About 75% of all those passing the +2 exam do a graduation course in commerce.
Barely 15% take up pure science and the rest do a course in Humanities (which was at one time considered a course to do when you could not do anything else based on your +2 marks).

Our education system is a system by rote and all evaluation depends on
Read 14 tweets
9 Oct
India's Covid-19 Outbreak Spreads Through Rural Areas nyti.ms/36LxSuI
COVID19 SURGES IN RURAL INDIA
The defiance of the coronavirus rules is being reflected across rural India, and it is propelling this nation’s virus caseload toward the No. 1 spot globally. Infections are rippling into every corner of this country of 1.3 billion people. The
Indian news media is calling it “The Rural Surge.”

In the Indian megacities where the pandemic first hit, vigorous public awareness campaigns have left the populace mostly on guard. But when it comes to government efforts to contain the virus, rural India is resisting.
Read 4 tweets
7 Oct
#ShaheenBagh #ModiSurrendersToChina
With a clear cut agenda to sell the country, Modi always knew that the promise of 2,00,00,000 jobs every year was never going to get fulfilled. He lied about job creation right from 2013 onward.
The youth waited. Then they started to see the sale of national assets taking place and the clever decimation of PSU's which were providing bulk of the jobs. That is when they woke up and the tipping point was the Corona outbreak which rendered the economy defunct.
Probably the last straw came when Modi literally abandoned the country by asking it to become self sufficient. That signaled a total failure of the government and exposed it as having no policy or plan to take the country out of the mess of sudden and brutal lock
Read 7 tweets
7 Oct
This is what justice for SSR achieved:
1. He was addicted to drugs.
2. He disliked his family, especially his father.
3. He left his long time girl friend once he became big in bollywood.
4. He lived with Rhea for many months.
5. He had four girl friends in 2 years.
6
. He holidayed in Thailand with Sara Ali Khan.
7. He wasn't murdered. It was a suicide.
8. His sister stayed with him for a week preceding his suicide.
9. He was in a state of depression. Consulted four clinical psychologists.
10. He was admitted in Hinduja hospital
for treatment.

When he died, I felt bad. I felt aggrieved. I remember a smiling face. A hero who conquered bollywood coming from a humble background. As I write this, far too many people who SSR loved and trusted are suffering and in the dock.
Read 6 tweets
6 Oct
#Petrolpricehike #modieastindiacompany

6th October 2020,
Bombay

What are private companies?

Private companies are companies owned by share holders with promoters holding the maximum number of shares.

What is the purpose of private companies?
The purpose of private companies is to earn maximum profit with minimum / efficient effort.

Will any private company create employment more than what is the bare minimum required?

No, in fact they will always try to get maximum work done by the minimum number of employees.
Will a private company work for public welfare and good?

No private company will work for public welfare or good unless they are able to get tax concessions of the same or bigger amount that they spend. Which is actually self defeating because the
Read 13 tweets

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