This chapter discusses the impact of cash transfers combined with coaching on the poorest individuals. It highlights how coaching addresses issues such as lack of self-confidence and limited knowledge, providing examples of impoverished individuals in India and Ghana who have benefited from coaching. The chapter explores the idea of coaching as a form of placebo, the importance of building confidence, and the scalability of coaching initiatives.
Want to support future conversations? Visit
conversationswithtyler.com/donate.
Long before Abhijit Banerjee won the 2019 economics Nobel with Michael Kremer and Esther Duflo, he was a fellow graduate student at Harvard with Tyler. For Tyler, Abhijit is one of the brightest economic minds he’s ever met, and “a brilliant theorist who decided the future was with empirical work.” But according to Abhijit, theory and practice go hand in hand: the real benefit of a randomized control trial isn’t getting unbiased estimates, he says, but in testing hypotheses borne out of theory.
Abhijit joined Tyler to discuss his unique approach to economics, including thoughts on premature deindustrialization, the intrinsic weakness of any charter city, where the best classical Indian music is being made today, why he prefers making Indian sweets to French sweets, the influence of English intellectual life in India, the history behind Bengali leftism, the best Indian regional cuisine, why experimental economics is underrated, the reforms he’d make to traditional graduate economics training, how his mother’s passion inspires his research, how many consumer loyalty programs he’s joined, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded December 2nd, 2019 Other ways to connect