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Conceptual Anomalies in Economics and Statistics - Lessons from the Social Experiment (Hardcover, New): Leland Gerson Neuberg Conceptual Anomalies in Economics and Statistics - Lessons from the Social Experiment (Hardcover, New)
Leland Gerson Neuberg
R3,292 Discovery Miles 32 920 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Do economics and statistics succeed in explaining human social behaviour? To answer this question. Leland Gerson Neuberg studies some pioneering controlled social experiments. Starting in the late 1960s, economists and statisticians sought to improve social policy formation with random assignment experiments such as those that provided income guarantees in the form of a negative income tax. This book explores anomalies in the conceptual basis of such experiments and in the foundations of statistics and economics more generally. Scientific inquiry always faces certain philosophical problems. Controlled experiments of human social behaviour, however, cannot avoid some methodological difficulties not evident in physical science experiments. Drawing upon several examples, the author argues that methodological anomalies prevent microeconomics and statistics from explaining human social behaviour as coherently as the physical sciences explain nature. He concludes that controlled social experiments are a frequently overrated tool for social policy improvement.

Conceptual Anomalies in Economics and Statistics - Lessons from the Social Experiment (Paperback): Leland Gerson Neuberg Conceptual Anomalies in Economics and Statistics - Lessons from the Social Experiment (Paperback)
Leland Gerson Neuberg
R1,359 Discovery Miles 13 590 Ships in 12 - 19 working days

Do economics and statistics succeed in explaining human social behaviour? To answer this question. Leland Gerson Neuberg studies some pioneering controlled social experiments. Starting in the late 1960s, economists and statisticians sought to improve social policy formation with random assignment experiments such as those that provided income guarantees in the form of a negative income tax. This book explores anomalies in the conceptual basis of such experiments and in the foundations of statistics and economics more generally. Scientific inquiry always faces certain philosophical problems. Controlled experiments of human social behaviour, however, cannot avoid some methodological difficulties not evident in physical science experiments. Drawing upon several examples, the author argues that methodological anomalies prevent microeconomics and statistics from explaining human social behaviour as coherently as the physical sciences explain nature. He concludes that controlled social experiments are a frequently overrated tool for social policy improvement.

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