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I’m an Economist: How much Coding Should I know?
Ongoing series
Start time:
November 15, 2022 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
EST
Location:
Online
Type:
Other
Speakers
Thomas Herndon
John Jay Colleg
Tim Fong
Data Scientist
Pier-André Bouchard St-Amant
ENAP - École nationale d'administration publique
Description
How much coding should an economist learn?
Can coding help your research?
What language is useful? Latex? Stata? Python? R?
Are we all becoming data analysts and computer programmers?
Join us to get answers to these questions and more, with help from panelists:
Pier-André Bouchard St-Amant
Pier-André has a bachelors in mathematics, a masters, PhD and a Post-Doc in Economics. He specializes in the analysis and optimization of public policy reforms or business practices. He does so through simulated models, statistical analysis and other mathematical techniques (some call it "Business Intelligence" or "Data Science"). Pier-André's main job is at École nationale d'administration publique ("National School of Public Administration") a small postgraduate university training public servants. He also work with governments, private corporations and social groups. On top of all that, he teaches quantitative methods and economics to graduate students.
Thomas Herndon
Thomas is associate professor of economics at John Jay College, CUNY. He first became known for critiquing "Growth in a Time of Debt", a widely cited academic paper by Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff supporting the austerity policies implemented by governments in Europe and North America in the early 21st century. His research concluded that these measures may not have been necessary. Watch his famous Colbert interview here.
Tim Fong
Tim is a Data Scientist with a diverse career background. He has worked with advertising, computer vision, and net worth data. He has an M.S. in Statistics from CUNY Baruch College and a JD from the University of San Francisco School of Law. His current economics interest is in Post-Keynesian price theory.
Moderated by: Kurt Semm
Kurt is an Education Research Analyst at INET, as well as a Ph.D. Student at the New School for Social Research. He received his BA at St. John’s University in Literature and Economics and an MS from the New School for Social Research. His main areas of research are Ecology, Political Economy, and Water Resources. At the moment, his research deals with the impact of water privatization on the Southwest United States water resources allocation, regional development, and equity.
Hosted by Working Group(s):
Attendees
Dr Saad Alrayes
Farah Khan
Kalibbala Jonathan Mukisa
Adelia Fatikhova
Hasitha Chamara
Kurt Semm
Goncalo Fonseca
Étienne Desfossés
Kelsey Brown
Barbara Schuster
Kim Tùng Đào
Maria Goungor
Shubhangani Chaudhary
Khadim Rassoul Gueye
ERBİL ÇELİK
Santiago Padilla Quintero
Thobile Mawelela
Chiara Sciascia
Ananya Joshi
Sai Srujan Reddy
Juan Pablo Bonilla Bernal
Yaku Fernandez
Alex Giannico
Patrick Hallan
Heksa Nuryastuti
Giulian Etingin-Frati
Armin Aminian
Wenjian Wang
Talha Hashmi
Basel Mansour
Ana Catelén
cajsa klass
Daniyal Khan
Yisheng Yang
Neha Sharma
Jack Anderson
Gustavo Castillo
Yannick Oswald
Madhushree Kulkarni
Shanty Margaretha
Benjamin Skjold
Mark Kirstein
Danish Sarwar
Danish Sarwar
Annalisa Tassi
Jonah Wolf
Kladiola Gjini
Sangram Mane
Eli Shapiro
Laís Fernanda S. Souza
GOVINDAPURAM SURESH
J.Christopher Proctor
Krshtee Sukhbilas
Firdous Ahmad Malik
Ajibola Akanji
Salma Sakr
Diana Prelorenzo
Thalita Borges Oliveira
Rok Piletic
Sara Costa
Vincent Jerald Ramos
Monica DiLeo
Kosal Nith
Heske van Doornen
Ajibola Akanji
Ajibola Akanji
Bijan Valilou
Tania Ferreira de Oliveira
Emmanuel Haruna
Christopher Pomwene Shafuda
Hala Farhat