3 Questions: Jonathan Parker on building an economic recovery
MIT professor evaluates the effect of government stimulus on the crisis-hit U.S. economy.
MIT professor evaluates the effect of government stimulus on the crisis-hit U.S. economy.
Economist Pierre Azoulay answers three questions about his finding that middle-aged entrepreneurs fare better than twentysomethings.
Study shows removing liability concerns slightly increases C-section procedures during childbirth.
Market concentration in the form of “superstar” firms has been lowering labor’s share of GDP in recent decades, a new study finds.
Institute ranks second in five subject areas.
A multidecade study shows economics increasingly overlaps with other disciplines, and has become more empirical in nature.
Study shows people prefer monthly payments in multiples of $100, even when it may cost them money.
In a Starr Forum talk, Luis Videgaray, director of MIT’s AI Policy for the World Project, outlines key facets of regulating new technologies.
MIT professor and alumna shared the 2019 Nobel Prize in economics, which recognized collaborators’ “experimental approach to alleviating global poverty.”
Evidence links Dutch-era sugar production and greater economic activity today.
The first cohort of 22 students from 14 countries share a common ambition: harnessing data to help others.
Academic, government, and advocacy leaders gathered to promote collaborative research partnerships to identify strategies that help workers thrive in today’s labor market.
Some basic metrics do effectively diagnose care quality, according to MIT economists.
The 10th round of MindHandHeart Innovation Fund projects is bringing diversity, equity, and inclusion, wellness, and community-building programming to campus.
Wielding complex algorithms, nuclear science and engineering doctoral candidate Nestor Sepulveda spins out scenarios for combating climate change.