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by nanis
1934 days ago
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> Economics is also statistics. Economics is not Statistics (and definitely not statistics). Most of the discipline focuses on testing models and making inferences on observational data. The techniques for dealing with that sort of data, of course, build on Statistics, but their nature is different enough that there is Econometrics. A large part of economics is not empirical at all -- despite the fact that people get Nobel prizes pretending this not to be the case. Even in the context of experimental economics, since the behavior of the observed vary depending on the mode of observation, the contexts in which the most straightforward Statistical methods designed to apply to engineering/chemistry/biology experiment type situations are not directly applicable (although it is great when they agree with the fancier methods). |
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I'm not sure which parts of the field or which prize winners you are talking about. To be clear: you think economics is _not actually empirical_, but people are awarded Nobel Prizes for _pretending that it is_? That's a little odd. Let me know if that's not what you meant.
When you look at this list:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nobel_Memorial_Prize_l...
Who satisfies that condition, in your mind? Who is getting the prize on the basis of pretending that economics is empirical?