Found at Environmental Economics: a new book called "Environmental Economics, Experimental Methods" has just surfaced, a happy example of (at very least) broadly innovative methods in economics (the experimental part) being wedded to policy questions outside the popularly perceived scope of economics. The book describes a variety of laboratory experiments whose results are relevant to environmental policy. The contents are here (pdf).
The experimental revolution must really have arrived for a book like this to exist. The whole problem of inferring causality in the complexity of the world is an acute problem that science has always tried to solve, one that the social sciences naturally have particular difficulty with. In economics, from this common difficulty came abstract theorizing, econometric inference from real data, and, latterly, randomized trials (aspiring to be cousin to the same in medicine) and laboratory experiments (aspiring to be cousin to the same in psychology).
A simple characterization of the difference between those last two might be this: the randomized trial method tries to isolate the effect of one thing on another, while the experimental school is entwined with the behavioral economists who seek to isolate the way people act. Clearly this steps on some psychological toes; our method is certainly pretty similar, with the possible exception that we're . We usually get people to sit at consumers and make decisions about what to do while they're interacting (usually anonymously) with other people in the experiment.
I think it's pretty amazing that experimental economics has exploded so quickly to generate a whole (big) book applying its results to a niche like environmental economics. Whatever you make of the experimental field, it's surely a pleasure to see an expansion in the range of scientific methods economists are employing. Logic, math, statistics; now trials and experiments.
On a completely unrelated note, I love this post, from Environmental Economics, about explaining your job as an economist.
"'Oh really, what do you teach?'...
'Economics.' The glazed look...
'Oh so you're in the business school?'"
I bet misunderstanding about what economics is can be even more annoying for an environmental economist than it is for the rest of us...
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