In 1932, the Cowles Commission was founded, taking Lord Kelvin’s maxim Science is Measurement as its motto. What and who is measured and the quality of measurement crucially affect microeconometric identification, estimation and inference. There is increasingly scope for making new progress in economic science by designing and implementing sharper measurement instruments to capture the reasoning, reacting and perhaps optimising behaviour of consumers, firms, and organisations. 75 years on, this conference, which marks cemmap’s evolution into a national Research Centre, funded by the UK Economic and Social Research Council, explores the interrelationships between measurement, microeconometric methods and practice and knowledge of economic processes. Themed half day sessions are planned on: measurement of expectations, partial identification, measurement error as well as general aspects of microeconometric estimation and inference. Science is Measurement Image: ‘Science is measurement’, 1879-1880. Engraving by C Butterworth after Henry Stacy Marks RA of a scientist armed with a tape measure ready to examine the skeleton of a large bird |
Microeconometrics: Measurement Matters (a cemmap conference)
Date & Time
From: 28 June 2007
Until: 30 June 2007
Type
Workshop
Venue
Wellcome Collection Conference Centre
Prices
HE Delegates: £95
Other Delegates: £95