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Lawrence Katz
@lkatz42
Economist studying labor markets, inequality, and economics of social problems
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    I am deeply honored and humbled to receive the 2020 @iza_bonn Prize in Labor Economics and immensely grateful to have had incredible mentors, collaborators, and students who made the work possible
    Congratulations to Lawrence Katz @lkatz42 @Harvard on winning the 2020 #IZAPrize in Labor Economics! newsroom.iza.org/en/archive/new…
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    Bob Solow was a true intellectual giant with pathbreaking work on growth, macro fluctuations, and wage setting. He was generous, incisive, and insightful and taught me both micro and macro theory at MIT. I never stopped learning from him. May his memory be a blessing.
    RIP. Bob Solow an absolute giant in Economics, has passed away at age 99. Tremendously influential in the profession and one of the key founders of the MIT Economics department as we live it today. Will be sorely missed.
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    Awesome and richly deserved Nobel to David Card, @metrics52, and Guido Imbens for building empirical labor economics, showing the power of natural experiments, and igniting the credibility revolution!
    BREAKING NEWS: The 2021 Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel has been awarded with one half to David Card and the other half jointly to Joshua D. Angrist and Guido W. Imbens. #NobelPrize
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    Many kudos to the amazing, brilliant, and always inspiring @PikaGoldin for winning the Nemmers Prize in Economics for her pathbreaking work into gender, labor markets, education, and economic history - a big day for Harvard economics in dire times. nemmers.northwestern.edu/prizes/2020gol…
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    My brief remembrance of my dear friend and long-term collaborator Alan Krueger @alan_krueger and his amazing work and influence is available at @ScienceMagazine: science.sciencemag.org/content/364/64… He is deeply missed.
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    Richard Freeman's (1989) 5 rules for empirical research in labor economics remain essential today: (1) Create own variation with experiment or use a natural experiment; (2) Focus on first-order economic & behavioral issues not the subtleties of theories that can't be detected
    Richard Freeman has a short piece on advice for doing empirical economics with a great point on this (and others) that has stuck with me. @lkatz42 used to assign this at the start of his PhD labor course (I do in mine now).
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    The (now updated) paper you need to read on the clustering of standard errors by the all-star team of Abadie, Athey (@Susan_Athey), Imbens, and Wooldridge (@jmwooldridge ) now in the @QJEHarvard! Need I say more?
    Recently accepted by #QJE, “When Should You Adjust Standard Errors for Clustering?” by Abadie, Athey (@Susan_Athey), Imbens, and Wooldridge (@jmwooldridge): doi.org/10.1093/qje/qj…
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    The amazing and brilliant @PikaGoldin (aka Claudia Goldin) wins the BBVA Frontiers of Knowledge Award in Economics!
    El #PremioFronteras en #Economía es para Claudia Goldin @PikaGoldin de @Harvard por sus contribuciones pioneras al análisis económico de las causas de la brecha de género
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    Some thoughts on inequality, wage structure, and moving to opportunity research in a nice piece by Bob Simison for @IMFNews
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    Awesome to see the pathbreaking work of @EDerenoncourt on "Can You Move to Opportunity? ..." as lead article in the latest issue of the AER! aeaweb.org/articles?id=10…
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    Sectoral employment programs generate large earnings gains in multiple RCTs through training in transferable and certifiable skills and reductions of employment barriers to high-wage sectors -- see our new @nberpubs working paper
    RCT evidence shows sector-focused training programs generate large and persistent earnings gains (11 to 40 percent) by getting workers into higher-wage sectors, from @lkatz42, @jondr44, Richard Hendra, and Kelsey Schaberg nber.org/papers/w28248
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    Replying to @IvanWerning
    @PikaGoldin is the real account. The other is a fake.
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    The NBER (@nberpubs ), with the support of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, is sponsoring three dissertation fellowships for doctoral students in economics & allied fields on Gender in the Economy. See the “call” here: nber.org/career-resourc… Due date is Jan. 5, 2023.
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    Replying to @lkatz42
    It is just incredibly sad that the amazingly creative and energetic Alan Krueger who shared in these innovations and brought them to the policy world is not around to share in the kudos