Entries Tagged as 'People Aren't Calculators'
November 2nd, 2009 · Comments Off
Now that I’ve used Getting Green Done to flesh out part of my argument, here’s the latest version of my framework.
The conventional economic framework, a.k.a. Econ 101, says the economy can be broken into 3 layers:
People are calculators: they rationally pursue their self-interest given near perfect information about the world
Organizations are calculators
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Tags: Framework · Model · Movement Perspective · Organizations Aren't Calculators · People Aren't Calculators · Practitioner's Perspective
October 7th, 2009 · Comments Off
A great piece by John Cassidy in the New Yorker on one major reason why Wall Street crashed.
According to a common narrative, we have lived through a textbook instance of the madness of crowds. If this were all there was to it, we could rest more comfortably: greed can be controlled, with some [...]
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Tags: Finance · People Aren't Calculators
September 9th, 2009 · Comments Off
As we’ve seen, Big Pharma’s very sophisticated in how they pollute the info doctors and patients have take decisions about drugs. Food manufacturers? Not so much.
A new food-labeling campaign called Smart Choices, backed by most of the nation’s largest food manufacturers, is “designed to help shoppers easily identify smarter [...]
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Tags: Health care · People Aren't Calculators
August 31st, 2009 · Comments Off
In a post on the economic issues around health insurance, Professor Dan Saviro makes the standard “moral hazard” argument:
Consumer demand drives the market, but it is largely the demand of subsidized consumers who are not actually paying at the margin for what they get. Suppose that in the market for groceries or cars we [...]
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Tags: Health care · People Aren't Calculators
August 17th, 2009 · 1 Comment
Richard Thaler is a very smart guy. He’s one of the founders of Behavioral Economics — the folks who argue that people aren’t calculators. So when he jumped into the healthcare debate over the public option, I was eager to see his take on the debate.
Unfortunately, he turned off his behavioral economist brain and [...]
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Tags: Health care · People Aren't Calculators
June 17th, 2009 · Comments Off
Recently NPR ran a piece about the impact behavioral economists — the folks who argue that people aren’t calculators — are having on the Obama administration. NPR gave a sample of the dizzying amount of hard empirical research backing up behavioral economics, then asked, “So why would economists assume that human beings are so hyper-rational?” [...]
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Tags: Model · Organizations Aren't Calculators · People Aren't Calculators
May 25th, 2009 · Comments Off
There’s one thing Democrats and Republican politicians agree on when it comes to healthcare reform: digitizing healthcare records could be a godsend. When it works, it can improve patient care, reduce medical errors, and save billions of dollars a year — a crucial consideration given the threat that skyrocketing healthcare costs pose to our economic [...]
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Tags: Checks and Balances · Health care · Organizational Development · Organizations Aren't Calculators · People Aren't Calculators
May 13th, 2009 · Comments Off
When most economists talk about the economy, they start from the assumption that people are calculators. If you want to understand how the economy works, they say, pretend that people are rational and that they have all the info they need to make a decision. Take a gazillion people making decisions in their rational self-interest, [...]
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Tags: Assumptions · Framework · Model · Organizational Development · People Aren't Calculators