J-PAL North America announces new evaluation incubator collaborators from state and local governments
Selected LEVER collaborators will work with the organization to develop an evaluation of their respective programs that alleviate poverty.
Selected LEVER collaborators will work with the organization to develop an evaluation of their respective programs that alleviate poverty.
The late-in-life health care option reduces patient costs, even as for-profit organizations expand in the sector.
The noninvasive screening procedure can reduce pregnancy risks and lower costs at the same time, but only when targeted effectively.
Along with James Robinson, the professors are honored for work on the relationship between economic growth and political institutions.
A new study shows that belonging to age-based groups, common in some global regions, influences finances and health.
Saeed Miganeh’s work at MIT is helping him answer important questions about designing effective programs for poverty mitigation and economic growth in African countries.
New professors join anthropology, economics, history, linguistics, music and theater arts, and philosophy departments, as well as the Program in Science, Technology, and Society.
Shared commitment to data-driven approach will help identify new policy solutions to reduce poverty and increase economic mobility in the US.
From scallop fishing in New Bedford to deforestation in the tropics, “our goal is to get some empirical traction on the problem,” says PhD student Aaron Berman.
Project led by MIT economist Rob Townsend aims to help low- and middle-income countries assess and utilize new technologies to improve central banks’ functions.
A new study shows someone’s beliefs about an LLM play a significant role in the model’s performance and are important for how it is deployed.
The new professorship will enable continued economics scholarship and help the chairholder train and support future economists.
The MITx MicroMasters in Data, Economics, and Design of Policy program educates learners around the world using its data-driven approach to poverty alleviation.
“I would like to understand the extent to which we understand things,” the MIT economist says.
In the new economics course 14.163 (Algorithms and Behavioral Science), students investigate the deployment of machine-learning tools and their potential to understand people, reduce bias, and improve society.