Monday, April 30, 2012

2nd RHUL – UCD Joint Workshop


Dear colleagues,

We would like to invite you to the second round of the UCD-RHUL Workshop which is taking place next Thursday and Friday on May 3rd-4th 2012 in the UCD Geary Institute seminar room.

This workshop is a joint initiative between Geary/UCD School of Economics and the Department of Economics at Royal Holloway. The focus is applied micro with an emphasis on education and health.

2nd RHUL – UCD Joint Workshop
UCD Geary Institute, University College Dublin
May 3rd-4th, 2012
Programme

Thursday 3rd May 2012
10.00-10.15 Introduction & Coffee
10.15-11.00 Alan Fernihough (UCD) – “Human Capital and the Quantity-Quality Trade-Off during the Demographic Transition”
11.00-11.45 Tanya Wilson (RHUL) – “Compulsory Education and Teenage Motherhood”
11.45-12.30 Matt Dickson (UCD) – “Education, Preferences and Well-being”
12.30-1.30 Lunch
1.30-2.15 Arnaud Chevalier (RHUL) – “Schooling and Voter Turnout: Is there an American Exception?”
2.15-3.00 John Regan (UCD) – “The Effects of Direct Mail on Voter Turnout: A Field Experiment”
3.00-3.15 Coffee
3.15-4.00 Eleftherios Giovanis (RHUL) – “Valuing Air Pollution in Britain”
4.00-4.45 Eric Maurin (EHESS) – “Getting Parents Involved: a Field Experiment in Deprived Schools”

Friday 4th May 2012
9.30-10.15 Kanika Kapur (UCD) – “Job Lock: Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity Design”
10.15-11.00 Ija Trapeznikova (RHUL) - “Employment Adjustment and Labor Utilization"
11.00-11.15 Coffee
11.15-12.00 Frank Walsh (UCD) – “The Formal Sector Wage Premium and Firm Size for Self-employed Workers”
12.00-1.00 Lunch
1.00-1.45 Dan Anderberg (RHUL) - “Domestic Abuse: Instrumental Violence and Economic Incentives”
1.45-2.30 Olive Sweetman – TBA

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Using Amazon Mechanical Turk for behavioral experiments

OECD Better Life Index

This data visualization tool allows you to see how OECD countries compare on the characteristics that you feel are most important in life (e.g. housing, income, life-satisfaction). You can select certain factors and even add a weight to each aspect. Interestingly, the end product is something like a garden with several flowers, each representing a country. The height of the flower indicates the country's overall score on the items you have selected. Each petal represents a factor (e.g. community), its length the country score on that factor, and its width the weighting you have assigned to that particular aspect. See below for an example. According to my ratings I should be living in either Australia, Canada, New Zealand or Sweden.. though I did apply a random set of weightings and got the same result- positive attributes cluster together it seems!

Suboptimal Choices and the Need for Experienced Individual Well-Being in Economic Analysis

Christopher K. Hsee - University of Chicago

Yuval Rottenstreich - New York University

Alois Stutzer - University of Basel and IZA

Standard economic analysis assumes that people make choices that maximize their utility. Yet both popular discourse and other fields assume that people sometimes fail to make optimal choices and thus adversely affect their own happiness. Most social sciences thus frequently describe some patterns of decision as suboptimal. We review evidence of suboptimal choices that arise for two reasons. First, people err in predicting the utility they may accrue from available choice options due to the evaluation mode. Second, people choose on the basis of salient rules that are unlikely to maximize utility. Our review is meant to highlight the possibility of a research program that combines economic analysis with measures of experienced individual well-being to improve people’s happiness.

Keywords: suboptimal choice, individual well-being, experienced utility, evaluation mode, salient rule, utility misprediction

LINK TO ARTICLE

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Stirling MA in Economics, Psychology and Policy

From 2013 we are proposing to run an MA programme in Economics, Psychology and Policy. It will bring top students to Stirling from fields such as economics, psychology, social statistics, philosophy, public health and related fields. Suggestions very welcome. Will post some more details as we progress. 

Modules:

- Behavioural Economics I
- Behavioural Economics II
- Health Psychology and Behaviour
- Social and Personality Psychology
- Experimental methods
- Statistical methods
- Survey Measurement
- Behavioural Finance
- Public Policy Project
- Journal Club
- Invited Seminar and Workshop Programme
- Dissertation

October Workshop on Economics, Psychology and Policy

Following last week's session in Stirling, we are working on the next event to be held again in Stirling in October. Details will be uploaded on to this page. Suggestions for talks very welcome. Areas will include well-being measurement and determinants, personality, psychology and biology of preferences, stress effects on decision making, mood effects on investment, environmental decision making.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Irish Economic Association Conference


THE IRISH ECONOMIC ASSOCIATION
Annual Conference
26 - 27 APRIL, 2012.
Institute of Bankers, Dublin.

The Twenty-sixth annual conference of the Irish Economic Association will be held on 26th and 27th April, 2012 at the Institute of Bankers, North Wall Quay. Dublin. The Conference will run over 2 days, starting at 9am on the morning of Thursday 26th, and finishing before 7pm on Friday 27th.
The Conference Programme is now available.

Peer Effects: Experimenting with Buddies


Experimenting with Buddies
Science, 2 December 2011, Vol. 334, no. 6060, pp. 1220-1221

Marco J. van der Leij
Center for Nonlinear Dynamics in Economics and Finance, University of Amsterdam.
Tinbergen Institute, Burg. Research Department, De Nederlandsche Bank.

Abstract: Go to any social gathering in your neighborhood and you will notice that people interact mostly with others who are similar in terms of age, gender, race, attributes, and behaviors. This tendency of people to have similar friends—known as homophily—is one of the most pervasive features of social networks (1). A key question is how much of the homophily in behavior can be attributed to social diffusion, that is, direct causal influence of one person on another through social ties (2, 3). Results from two clever Internet experiments reported by Centola last year (4) and on page 1269 of this issue (5) shed light on how the particular arrangement of social ties promotes social diffusion. 

Monday, April 23, 2012

UCD Graduate Research Student Symposium 2012

Graduate Research Student Symposium 2012


The joint Graduate Symposium of the College of Human Sciences Graduate School along with College of Business and Law Graduate School takes place on Thursday 26th of April 2012 in Quinn School of Business. Research students from both colleges, in mixed panels, will present their research in two parallel sessions throughout the day.

Schedule

9:00 Opening: Professor Brian Nolan, College Principal, College of Human Sciences

9:15-11:00
Good Governance (Q233) / Risk & Investment (Q201) / Managing Professionals (Q116)

Coffee Break - Contemplation Room

11:20-13:05
Bias in Decision Making (Q233) / Failure & Firm Performance (Q201) / Demographics & (In)equality (Q166)

Lunch - Contemplation Room
Poster Presentation Workshop (Q013)

14:30-16:40
Communities & Social Life (Q233)

14:55-16:40
Law and Ethics (Q201)

Full Schedule

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Special Issue in Science on Early Childhood Education

There was a special issue on early childhood education in Science magazine last summer. A link to the special issue introduction (and table of contents) is below. Science 19 August 2011: Vol. 333 no. 6045 p. 951. Introduction: Laying the Foundation for Lifetime Learning. Pamela Hines, Melissa McCartney, Jeffrey Mervis, Brad Wible.

2012/2013 Barrington Medal

Congratulations again to Orla Doyle on being the 2011/2012 Barrington Lecturer. Details of the 2012/2013 competition are below (via the website)


The Barrington Medal is awarded annually by the Council of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland under the auspices of the Barrington Trust (founded in 1836 by the bequest of John Barrington). The award is intended to recognise promising new researchers in the economic and social sciences in Ireland. This will be the 164th anniversary of the lecture series and the recipient will be the one hundred and twenty-fourth Barrington Lecturer. The award is a silver medal and €1,000.

The lecture should be based on a paper of not more than 7,500 words addressing a topic of relevance to economic or social policy and of current interest in Ireland. In treating the issue of economic or social policy, the paper may either report the findings of a statistical research study dealing with some aspect of the problem or deal with the underlying theoretical considerations involved, or combine these two approaches. It should be written in a manner that makes it accessible to non-specialists in the area. More technical material may be included in an appendix. The paper is published in the Journal of the Society, so it should not have been published before (nor should it be published subsequently without the prior consent of the Council of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland).

Candidates, who should be within 10 years of completing a primary degree (or not more than 33 years of age), should submit a detailed abstract of approximately 1,000 words on the proposed lecture. They should also submit a short curriculum vitae and the name of a proposer who is familiar with their work. The entries should be sent by 27th July 2012 to:

Seán Lyons
Honorary Secretary
The Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland
c/o Economic & Social Research Institute
Whitaker Square, Sir John Rogerson’s Quay
Dublin 2
Tel: (01) 863 2019
e-mail: Sean.Lyons@esri.ie

SIRE Workshop on Value, Well-Being and Decisions: Thanks

Thanks to participant's at Friday's session on Value, Well-Being and Decisions held at Stirling. This was the first workshop of the new research group (twitter stream here). Thanks to colleagues from both the economics and psychology divisions at Stirling for attending, as well as audience participants and speakers from UCD, Malta, Aberdeen and Edinburgh universities. A number of themes emerged during the course of the day including (i) the importance of developing further the measurement of time and risk preferences (ii) conceptual issues in the measurement of well-being and use in policy (iii) the interplay between preferences and education throughout life (iv) the potential for cross-overs with animal psychology in understanding human well-being and stress measurement (v) the role perceptions of political parties and government motives may play in determining acceptance of policies based on behavioural economics. The next workshop for this new center will be in September and further details will be posted here soon. Suggestions very welcome.


Details:
On April 20th, Stirling will host a SIRE Workshop on Value, Well-Being and Decisions. The purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers at different career stages to discuss work in this growing cross-disciplinary area. There will be a strong emphasis on discussing potential future collaborative research in this area, and also a particular emphasis on the interplay between well-being research and research on the behavioural economics of time discounting. Scottish-based PhD students in SIRE institutions are eligible to receive their travel expenses. The venue is the management center in Stirling University. Registration can be made by emailing Clare Delargy (claremdelargy@gmail.com ). Places are somewhat limited due to space and will be allocated on a first-come basis. A new research group in Stirling will be launched in this area beginning in September 2012 and some details of this will also be provided on the day (see provisional website http://stirlingeconpsych.squarespace.com/ )

9am - 9.30am: Coffee and Introductions

9.30 - 10.15: Liam Delaney (Stirling) "Stress and Financial Decision-Making"

10.30 - 11.15: Marjon Van Pol (Aberdeen): "Socioeconomic Status, Time Preferences and Health"

11.15 - 12.00: Marie Briguglio (Stirling and Malta): "Determinants of Recycling Behaviour".
Lunch and break-out session

2pm - 2.45: Matt Dickson (UCD): "Education, Preferences and Well-Being"

3pm - 3.45: Mirko Moro (Stirling): "Environment and Well-Being".

3.45: Panel Discussion on Future Directions in Well-Being and Decision Research

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Papers on Personality and Economics

Three recent published papers that we have worked on incorporate personality in understanding economic behaviour (here here and here ) and a number of working papers are currently in review (e.g. here and here )

In general, this is an area that is attracting substantial interest and it will be very interesting to see it develop in the next ten years. Below are some papers that are essential reading on the topic:

Almlund, Mathilde & Duckworth, Angela Lee & Heckman, James J. & Kautz, Tim, 2011. "Personality Psychology and Economics," IZA Discussion Papers 5500, Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).

Borghans, Lex & Golsteyn, Bart & Heckman, James J. & Humphries, John Eric, 2011. "Identification Problems in Personality Psychology," IZA Discussion Papers 5605, Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).

James J. Heckman, 2011. "Integrating Personality Psychology into Economics," NBER Working Papers 17378, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.

Lex Borghans & Angela Lee Duckworth & James J. Heckman & Bas ter Weel, 2008. "The Economics and Psychology of Personality Traits," Journal of Human Resources, University of Wisconsin Press, vol. 43(4).

by Becker, Anke & Deckers, Thomas & Dohmen, Thomas & Falk, Armin & Kosse, Fabian


Jon Anderson,a Stephen Burks,b Colin DeYoung,c and Aldo Rustichinid,e
Version 1.2 (Preliminary).

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

The Relationship Between Economic Preferences and Psychological Personality Measures

ABSTRACT
The Relationship Between Economic Preferences and Psychological Personality Measures*

Although both economists and psychologists seek to identify determinants of heterogeneity in behavior, they use different concepts to capture them. In this review we first analyze the extent to which economic preferences and psychological concepts of personality – such as the Big Five and locus of control – are related. We analyze data from incentivized laboratory experiments and representative samples and find only low degrees of association between economic preferences and personality. We then regress life outcomes – such as labor market success, health status and life satisfaction – simultaneously on preference and personality measures. The analysis reveals that the two concepts are rather complementary when it comes to explaining heterogeneity in important life outcomes and behavior.

JEL Classification: C91, D01, D80, D90, I00, J30, J62


Keywords: risk preference, time preference, social preferences, locus of control, Big Five
Corresponding author:
Armin Falk
Department of Economics
University of Bonn
Adenauerallee 24-42
53113 Bonn
Germany
E-mail: armin.falk@uni-bonn.de
*

Monday, April 16, 2012

Investing in Health to Improve the Wellbeing of the Disadvantaged: Reversing the Argument of the Marmot Reports

Investing in Health to Improve the Wellbeing of the Disadvantaged: Reversing the Argument of the Marmot Reports

David Canning and Diana Bowser
Social Science & Medicine
Volume 71, Issue 7, October 2010, Pages 1223–1226

Abstract

The Marmot reports have argued that health inequalities are the result of social inequalities. They advocate reducing health inequalities by undertaking fundamental changes that make society fairer. We argue that the focus should be on improving the health and wellbeing of the disadvantaged, even if the policies that do this also raise the health of the better off, and worsen inequality. We also argue that the causality runs from health to social status, and that health interventions are needed to improve socioeconomic outcomes. While we disagree on goals and mechanisms we are in surprisingly close agreement with Marmot Reports on policies. In particular, we agree with the focus on in early childhood investments in health and physical and cognitive development that have long term socioeconomic payoffs. We also endorse making society fairer, though mainly as a goal in itself rather than an instrument to reduce health inequality.

Keywords: Health gradient; Social inequality; Social determinants of health; Fair Society, Healthy Lives (The Marmot Review)

Ungated Version

IZA Paper: Interpreting Time Horizon Effects in Inter-Temporal Choice

Interpreting Time Horizon Effects in Inter-Temporal Choice

Thomas Dohmen
ROA, Maastricht University,
DIW and IZA

Armin Falk
University of Bonn,
CEPR and IZA

David Huffman
Swarthmore College
and IZA

Uwe Sunde
University of St. Gallen,
CEPR and IZA

Discussion Paper No. 6385
February 2012

We compare different designs that have been used to test for an impact of time horizon on discounting, using real incentives and two representative data sets. With the most commonly used type of design we replicate the typical finding of declining (hyperbolic) discounting, but with other designs find constant or increasing discounting. As a whole, the data are not consistent with any of these usual candidate discounting assumptions, and they also imply a violation of transitivity. The results have implications for interpreting previous evidence, and pose an important puzzle for understanding inter-temporal choice.

JEL Classification: D01, D90, D03, E21

Keywords: time preference, hyperbolic discounting, self-control, dynamic inconsistency,
intransitivity

Tracing the origins of successful aging: The role of childhood conditions and social inequality in explaining later life health

Tracing the origins of successful aging: The role of childhood conditions and social inequality in explaining later life health

Martina Brandt, Christian Deindl, Karsten Hank

a Max-Planck-Institute for Social Law and Social Policy, Munich Center for the Economics of Aging, Amalienstr. 33, 80799 Munich, Germany
b Institute of Sociology, University of Cologne, Germany
Available online 21 February 2012.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.01.004, How to Cite or Link Using DOI


Permissions & Reprints
Abstract
This study investigates the role of childhood conditions and social inequality in older Europeans' propensity to age successfully, controlling for later life risk factors. Successful aging was assessed following Rowe and Kahn's conceptualization, using baseline interviews from the first two waves of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE). These data were merged with retrospective information on participants from 13 Continental European countries, collected as part of the SHARELIFE project. Our sample consists of 22,464 men and women, who are representative of the non-institutionalized population aged 50 or older (mean age: 63.3) in their respective country. Estimating multilevel logistic models, we controlled for demographics (age, sex), childhood conditions (SES, health, cognition), later life risk factors (various dimensions of SES and health behaviors), as well as social inequality (measured by country-specific Gini coefficients). There is an independent association of childhood living conditions with elders' odds of aging well. Higher parental SES, better math and reading skills, as well as self-reports of good childhood health were positively associated with successful aging, even if contemporary characteristics were controlled for. Later life SES and health behaviors exhibited the expected correlations with our dependent variable. Moreover, lower levels of income inequality were associated with a greater probability of meeting Rowe and Kahn's successful aging criteria. We conclude that unfavorable childhood conditions exhibit a harmful influence on individuals' chances to age well across all European welfare states considered in this study. Policy interventions should thus aim at improving the conditions for successful aging throughout the entire life course.

Highlights
► This study uses unique life history data from 13 European countries to trace the origins of successful aging. ► Childhood conditions greatly impact individuals' odds of aging successfully, independent of later life risk factors. ► Lower social inequality in a country is associated with higher odds of aging well. ► Welfare state policies have the capacity to improve conditions for healthy and active aging from early life onwards.

Keywords
Europe; Successful aging; Adult health; Childhood conditions; Social inequality; SHARELIFE

Impatience and Uncertainty: Experimental Decisions Predict Adolescents’ Field Behavior

Impatience and Uncertainty: Experimental Decisions Predict Adolescents’ Field Behavior

Matthias Sutter
University of Innsbruck,
University of Gothenburg and IZA
Martin G. Kocher
University of Munich
Daniela Rützler
University of Innsbruck
Stefan T. Trautmann
University of Tilburg

ABSTRACT
Impatience and Uncertainty:
Experimental Decisions Predict Adolescents’ Field Behavior*

We study risk attitudes, ambiguity attitudes, and time preferences of 661 children and
adolescents, aged ten to eighteen years, in an incentivized experiment. We relate experimental choices to field behavior. Experimental measures of impatience are found to be significant predictors of health related field behavior and saving decisions. In particular, more impatient children and adolescents are more likely to spend money on alcohol and cigarettes, have a higher body mass index (BMI) and are less likely to save money. Experimental measures for risk and ambiguity attitudes are only weak predictors of field behavior.

JEL Classification: C91, C93, D81, D90

Keywords: experiments with children and adolescents, risk, ambiguity, time preferences,
health status, savings, external validity, field behavior

Friday, April 13, 2012

Meta-Analysis of relation of self-control to behaviour

Taking stock of self-control: a meta-analysis of how trait self-control relates to a wide range of behaviors.

de Ridder DT, Lensvelt-Mulders G, Finkenauer C, Stok FM, Baumeister RF.
Source
Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands. D.T.D.deRidder@uu.nl


Abstract
Given assertions of the theoretical, empirical, and practical importance of self-control, this meta-analytic study sought to review evidence concerning the relationship between dispositional self-control and behavior. The authors provide a brief overview over prominent theories of self-control, identifying implicit assumptions surrounding the effects of self-control that warrant empirical testing. They report the results of a meta-analysis of 102 studies (total N = 32,648) investigating the behavioral effects of self-control using the Self-Control Scale, the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale, and the Low Self-Control Scale. A small to medium positive effect of self-control on behavior was found for the three scales. Only the Self-Control Scale allowed for a fine-grained analysis of conceptual moderators of the self-control behavior relation. Specifically, self-control (measured by the Self-Control Scale) related similarly to the performance of desired behaviors and the inhibition of undesired behaviors, but its effects varied dramatically across life domains (e.g., achievement, adjustment). In addition, the associations between self-control and behavior were significantly stronger for automatic (as compared to controlled) behavior and for imagined (as compared to actual) behavior.
PMID: 21878607 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Alan Krueger: Job Search and Unemployment Insurance: Theory and Evidence

Useful talk from last summer by Alan Krueger. All of the talks from the IGIER 20th Anniversary conference are available on youtube (programme here)

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Life Satisfaction, Income and Personality Theory

Life Satisfaction, Income and Personality Theory
Eugenio Protoa Aldo Rustichinib
aDepartment of Economics, University of Warwick
bDepartment of Economics, University of Minnesota
September 2011

Abstract: Neuroticism is responsible for the decline of happiness with high income and its increase for lower incomes in both SOEP and BHPS datasets. We suggest that the e ect is due to the psychological cost of the gap between aspiration and realized income. High income individuals fail to meet expectation, this explains lower increase or decrease of life satisfaction for highly neurotic individuals for higher income levels. Data show a hump-shaped relation between income and life satisfaction, with a bliss point between 250-300K 2005 USD. For highly neurotic this peak occurs at lower income, and disappears for non neurotic individuals.

JEL classi cation: D03; D870; C33.
Keywords: Life Satisfaction, Income, Personality Theory, Neuroticism.

Orla Doyle Barrington Lecture

(from Sean Lyons)

A meeting of the Statistical & Social Inquiry Society of Ireland will take place on Wednesday, 18th April 2012, starting at 6:00 pm, in the Royal Irish Academy, 19 Dawson Street, Dublin 2. Dr Orla Doyle (UCD School of Economics and Geary Institute) will present a paper titled Breaking the Cycle of Deprivation: An Experimental Evaluation of an Early Childhood Intervention.

The abstract is set out below and a draft of the paper is available here.

Abstract:
Deprivation early in life has multiple long term consequences for both the individual and society. An increasing body of evidence finds that targeted, early interventions aimed at at-risk children and their families can reduce socioeconomic inequalities in children’s skills and capabilities. This paper describes a randomised control trial (RCT) evaluation of a five-year preventative programme which aims to improve the school readiness skills of socioeconomically disadvantaged children. The Preparing for Life (PFL) programme is one of the first studies in Ireland to use random assignment to experimentally modify the environment of high risk families and track its impact over time. This paper describes the design and motivation for the study, the randomisation procedure adopted and the baseline data collected. Using Monte Carlo permutation testing, it finds that the randomisation procedure was successful as there are no systematic differences between the treatment and control groups at baseline. This indicates that future analysis of treatment effects over the course of the five year evaluation can be causally attributed to the programme and used to determine the impact of Preparing for Life on children’s school readiness skills.


Non-members are welcome to attend and participate in the discussion.

New ESRI Working Paper: The Long Term Health Effects of Education

The Long Term Health Effects of Education

Vincent O Sullivan*

Abstract: Using data from The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing, I find that exogenous changes in the schooling of men born into lower social class families in Ireland during the late 1940s and 1950s had a statistically significant positive effect on their self-reported health in later life. I also find that the increased level of schooling had a statistically significant positive effect on physical exercise in later life as well as reducing the probability of an individual experiencing certain non-cardiovascular chronic conditions. However no statistically significant effect was found in relation to cardiovascular disease, self-rated mental health, smoking behaviour or self-reported and objectively measured memory although there is a high degree of imprecision in these estimates.

Corresponding Author: Vincent.o-sullivan@tcd.ie
Keywords: Causal Effects of Education, Self-Reported Health, Older People

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Sunday, April 08, 2012

Edwyn Collins Low Expectations

A lot of current research around colleagues here looking at expectations so a good excuse to put up lovely version of Edwyn Collins Low Expectations

Checkmate: Exploring Backward Induction among Chess Players

Levitt, Steven D., John A. List, and Sally E. Sadoff. 2011. "Checkmate: Exploring Backward Induction among Chess Players." American Economic Review, 101(2): 975–90.
DOI:10.1257/aer.101.2.975

Abstract
Although backward induction is a cornerstone of game theory, most laboratory experiments have found that agents are not able to successfully backward induct. We analyze the play of world-class chess players in the centipede game, which is ill-suited for testing backward induction, and in pure backward induction games—Race to 100 games. We find that chess players almost never play the backward induction equilibrium in the centipede game, but many properly backward induct in the Race to 100 games. We find no systematic within-subject relationship between choices in the centipede game and performance in pure backward induction games. (JEL C73)

Ungated Version

Saturday, April 07, 2012

Minimum Alcohol Price

Below is an article on minimum alcohol pricing Clare Delargy and I wrote for Business and Finance (original link here), 


The introduction of a minimum price for alcohol is now firmly on agenda of government in both Ireland and UK. In particular, the plans of the Scottish Parliament are at an advanced stage, and a preliminary vote was recently cast in favour of its introduction, and the Conservatives have just released a policy that will put the minimum alcohol price at 40p per unit in England and Wales. The report of the National Steering Group on a National Substance Misuse Strategy, published in 2012, recommends the introduction of such a policy in Ireland, and junior health minister Roisín Shortall has recently suggested in interviews her intention to pass it into law.

A minimum charge for alcohol introduces a price floor below which a unit of alcohol cannot be sold. It is a policy distinct from taxation; existing alcoholic products which are currently sold above the minimum price per unit would not be affected by a change to the minimum price, whereas tax increases affect all qualifying products.

One key issue for policy makers is setting the minimum price, and deciding whether it will be on a per unit, per drink or per gramme of alcohol basis. The UK government initially proposed a ban on below-cost selling, which in the UK would set the alcohol price at 28p per unit of spirits and 21p per unit of beer; this means the price of a litre of spirits would become £10.71, a bottle of wine £2.03 and a can of lager £0.38. Public health advocates argue that prohibiting below-cost selling would not have any material impact; instead they recommend a £0.50 minimum price per unit as necessary to have an adequate effect. This would result in a litre of spirits being priced at £20, a bottle of wine priced at £3.50, and a can of lager at £1.

The extent to which a minimum price would actually influence consumption is also of importance. A RAND study had shown that increasing the affordability of alcohol leads to higher consumption. The most credible study on the introduction of a minimum price, carried out by a group of academics at the University of Sheffield, found that a 50p minimum price could be expected to bring about savings just under £10bn in areas such as crime and health. The study predicts that a 40p minimum price would reduce consumption by 4.4% over 10 years. A key benefit of the minimum alcohol price (MAP), from a public health point of view, is that it targets high-volume consumption of cheap alcohol, effectively raising the cost of the cheapest route to getting drunk. A study of an existing policy in British Columbia has shown that a 10% increase in minimum drink prices reduced alcohol-related hospital admissions for injuries and poisonings by 7.2%, and achieved an overall reduction of 9.2% in alcohol attributable deaths.

Another area of concern is how the introduction of the MAP would affect different distributors of alcohol. As most trade premises (e.g. pubs) already sell alcohol at a price above 50p per unit, minimum pricing would primarily influence low-cost selling in off trade premises, like supermarkets. The Vintner’s Federation of Ireland has provisionally supported the introduction of minimum price legislation, as a method of promoting the responsible consumption of alcohol. Given the trend from bar sales to off-sales, this may be a welcome development for vintners closing the relative gap between their prices and the cheapest options. The Alcohol Beverage Foundation of Ireland (ABFI) has opposed minimum pricing, arguing that the evidence as to their effectiveness is not strong enough and may contravene competition legislation. Additionally, they hold that the alcohol industry currently has many significant economic benefits for Ireland, which may be threatened by such an approach.

Critics object to the MAP on the basis that it unfairly penalises low-income moderate drinkers, who would have to adjust their consumption patterns to adjust to price increases. Furthermore, the potential for smuggling from Northern Ireland, or an increase in cross-border shopping as a significant issue is reflected in the suggestion that Northern Ireland and the Republic could co-ordinate in the introduction of the laws to minimise negative effects in either jurisdiction. A potential increase in inflation along with price increases should also be carefully considered. Minimum pricing for alcohol would also perhaps be less beneficial to the exchequer than taxation as there is no stipulation that the balance of increase in prices would go to the State, instead it would be reflected in a profit increase for the seller.

The debate will unfold along these lines in the next year. The initial evaluations of the Scottish case will be one key input and the recent policy announcements in England will further add to the momentum for this in Ireland.

Liam Delaney is Professor of Economics at Stirling and research fellow at the Geary Institute in UCD. Clare Delargy is a researcher at the Geary Institute.

Friday, April 06, 2012

External Funding Possibilities to work on Economics and Psychology in Stirling Group

Below are some external funding opportunities that people thinking of working with our emerging research group in Stirling might consider. Clearly, some of the below deadlines are too soon for this year but most of these are recurring calls. Potential PhD students, academic colleagues in other universities, potential postdocs and so on may find below useful. Specific PhD studentships for the group are advertised on this link, and our preliminary website is http://stirlingeconpsych.squarespace.com/ 
1. 12th January 2012: Marie Curie ITN: Initial Training Networks (ITN) offer early-stage researchers the opportunity to improve their research skills, join established research teams and enhance their career prospects.Usually, at least three participants join together to propose a coherent programme for an ITN. The participants can be universities, research centres or companies (large or small). Any research field in the humanities or science may qualify for ITN funding – provided that there is an element of mobility across national borders.

http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/page/people?callIdentifier=FP7-PEOPLE-2012-ITN

2. 7th February: ESRC Knowledge Exchange Opportunities
This scheme provides researchers with an opportunity to engage with organisations in the private, public and civil society sector(s) on a social science issue. The Knowledge Exchange Opportunities Scheme now covers activities at all stages of the research process; from setting up networks to help inform the first stages of research; to the development of activities designed to apply previous research to policy and practice issues (previously covered by the ESRC Follow on Fund Scheme). Please note this is a collaborative scheme and, as such, all applications must include at least 25% co-funding from partner(s) in the user community (depending on the sector involved). For further details, including how to apply, please visit:

http://www.esrc.ac.uk/funding-and-guidance/collaboration/knowledge-exchange/opportunities/index.aspx

3. 14th February 2012: RSE/Scottish Government Personal Research Fellowships.

These postdoctoral Research Fellowships aim to provide outstanding researchers, who should have the potential to become leaders in their chosen field, with the opportunity to build an independent research career. Applicants will have completed between 2 and 6 years of relevant postdoc academic research and can currently reside anywhere in the world working in any of the physical, computational, engineering, biological, medical, natural and social disciplines (although the research project proposed must align to one or more of the Scottish Government’s National Outcomes - see

http://www.scotland.gov.uk/About/scotPerforms/outcome).

Applicants must show that they have an outstanding capacity for innovative research with a strong publication record relevant to their proposed field of study. The fellowships are tenable for up to 5 years in a Scottish institution (ideally from 1st Oct 2012) and will include an opportunity for the fellow to work anywhere abroad for up to a year during the fellowship to help establish research collaborations. Funds will cover up to 4.5 years of fellow salary costs, associated overheads, and up to £6K per year research support costs. The host institution must commit to covering the final 6 months of the fellows salary. Further information about the scheme along with the application form can be found at

http://www.royalsoced.org.uk/995_FormsandGuidance.html

4. 21st March 2012: Leverhulme Research Project Grant.

The aim of these awards is to provide financial support for innovative and original research projects of high quality and potential, the choice of theme and the design of the research lying entirely with the applicant (the Principal Investigator). The grants provide support for the salaries of research staff engaged on the project, plus associated costs directly related to the research proposed.

Proposals are favoured which:

* reflect the personal vision of the applicant;
* demonstrate compelling competence in the research design;
* surmount traditional disciplinary academic boundaries;
* involve a degree of challenge and evidence of the applicant’s ability to assess risk.

Value and Duration

The great majority of awards involve a spend of up to £250,000 over a duration of two to three years. If compelling evidence is provided, awards may be made for sums between £250,000 and £500,000 for research over a period of up to five years. The assessment procedures for these large grants are especially stringent, and can involve site visits and discussions with applicants.

Topics

Applications for research on any topic within the entire array of academic disciplines are eligible for support. However, an exception is made for areas of research supported by specialist funding agencies and, in particular, for medicine. In such cases, applicants should consider an application to these alternative funding bodies as being more appropriate. Specific attention is paid to the reasons given by applicants in justifying their choice of the Trust as the most appropriate agency for the support of their project.

http://www.leverhulme.ac.uk/funding/RPG/RPG.cfm

5. April 2012: Secondary Data Analysis (ESRC)

http://www.esrc.ac.uk/news-and-events/news/delivering-priorities-funding/secondary-data-analysis.aspx

The UK has a unique and internationally renowned collection of datasets which will form the foundation of the Initiative (see file attached). This data infrastructure provides a huge opportunity to address some of the most pressing challenges facing society today and into the future. For example, our portfolio of longitudinal studies has already revealed how fundamental and complex causal relationships influence individual life trajectories in a whole variety of ways. They have supported research across a wide terrain, including areas such as obesity, educational attainment, crime, social mobility and welfare and emotional wellbeing. These studies have also provided a strong evidence base to support a battery of government anti-poverty strategies, health campaigns, schooling policies, social welfare reform and other interventions.

The Secondary Data Analysis Initiative will build upon and extend the impact of longitudinal studies and a wide variety of other data resources. Given the richness of data available across the UK’s social and economic data infrastructure, the Initiative will not be thematically driven and proposals are welcome in any area which can generate policy and practitioner impact. Nevertheless there are significant opportunities for proposals to address key issues in our strategic priorities -
http://www.esrc.ac.uk/strategic-priorities

Priorities:
· Economic Performance and Sustainable Growth
· Influencing Behaviour and Informing Interventions
· A Vibrant and Fair Society

The Initiative will also aim to penetrate a range of disciplines which move well beyond traditional users of these data, in, for example economics, and some areas of sociology and geography. The expectation is that use will deepen in these disciplines but also will also extend to researchers from wider backgrounds.

6. 19th April 2012. Marie Curie Industry-Academia Partnerships and Pathways.

This action seeks to open and foster dynamic pathways between public research organisations and private commercial enterprises, in particular SMEs, including traditional manufacturing industries, based on longer term co-operation programmes with a high potential for increasing knowledge-sharing and mutual understanding of the different cultural settings and skill requirements of both sectors. Participants under this action are on the one hand, one or more universities/research centres and on the other, one or more enterprises, in particular SMEs, that propose a project based on a joint cooperation programme. Within this scheme, the industrial partners must be organisations operating on a commercial basis, i.e. companies gaining the majority of their revenue through competitive means with exposure to commercial markets, and will include incubators, start-ups and spin-offs, venture capital companies, etc. The different participants should be from at least two different Member or Associated countries, of which at least one must be from a Member State. The participants recruit and/or host eligible researchers and contribute directly to the implementation of longer-term cooperation programmes established between them in line with the objectives of this action.

http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/page/people?callIdentifier=FP7-PEOPLE-2012-IAPP

7. 30th April 2012: Leverhulme Research Leadership Awards

The Research Leadership Award scheme provides funds to build a research group under the direction of the grant holder, who must be at least 2 years into their first university post (but not sufficiently long in post for the trajectory of their research contribution to have become established). Awards will be for a sum of between £800,000 and £1 million over a period of up to 5 years and funds can be used to employ a research group of research assistants and research students (but cannot be used to cover applicant salary or overheads). Applications for research in any subject area within the Trust’s normal remit will be eligible for support. See
http://www.leverhulme.ac.uk/funding/RLA/RLA.cfm) for more details of the scheme.

8. September 2012: Marie Curie Career Integration Grant
Marie Curie Career Integration Grants are intended to improve considerably the prospects for the permanent integration of researchers who are offered a stable research post in Europe after a mobility period in a country different from the country where the researcher has been active during the past years (i.e. the researcher has to be mobile but can come from anywhere in the world – moving within Europe or coming from outside Europe). The duration of these grants is up to 4 years.

http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/page/people?callIdentifier=FP7-PEOPLE-2012-CIG

9. International Outgoing Fellowships for Career Development

The specific objectives of the Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowships for CareerDevelopment can be described as follows:

"This action aims to reinforce the international dimension of the career of European researchers by giving them the opportunity to be trained and acquire new knowledge in a high-level organisation active in research, established in an Other Third Country. Subsequently, these researchers will return with the acquired knowledge and experience to an organisation in a Member State or Associated country" (2011 "People" Work Programme)
Experienced researchers applying to this action need to identify and develop a research training project that will provide the means to advance significantly in their career. A fundamental concept underlying this action is that of advanced training and life-long learning. In essence, the fellowship should enable the experienced researcher to progress in the development of his/her career and should not represent a temporary solution. The fellowship is expected to be part of a structured, long-term professional development plan that is coherent with past achievements and clearly defines the future aims of the researcher.

http://ec.europa.eu/research/fp7/understanding/marie-curieinbrief/europe-world_en.html

10. Intra-European Fellowships for career development (IEF)
This action provides financial support for advanced training and trans-national mobility, for a period of 12 to 24 months (full-time equivalent), for individual projects presented by experienced researchers active in Member States or associated countries in liaison with a host organisation from another Member State or associated country. Overall, projects are expected to add significantly to the career development of the best and most promising researchers active in Europe, in order to enhance and maximise their contribution to the knowledge-based economy and society.
http://ec.europa.eu/research/fp7/understanding/marie-curieinbrief/research-development_en.html

11. Economic and Social Research Council studentships for Scotland
(MSc+PhD or PhD only)


The SGPE is one of the research training pathways that forms part of the ESRC Scottish Doctoral Training Centre. ESRC 1+3 (MSc+PhD) and +3 (PhD only) studentships in Economics are available at the 8 SGPE universities: Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Heriot-Watt, Stirling, Strathclyde and St. Andrews. They are intended solely for students either starting a PhD or intending to start a PhD following their MSc. Students wishing to apply for an SGPE "1+3" or a "+3" award must submit a written and credible research proposal for their PhD. Further information on eligibility and details can be found on the DTC and the ESRC Websites.

Applicants interested in PhD study only (+3) should have applied to and have received an offer from their preferred SGPE university by the 3rd of May, 2011.

Applicants interested in MSc+PhD study (1+3) should have applied to and have received an offer from SGPE MSc Programme taught at the the University of Edinburgh by the 3rd of May, 2011. 1+3 applicants should NOT apply for a PhD (in addition to the MSc) at their preferred Unviversity at this stage, but they MUST contact the relevant PhD Coordinator (see instructions below.)

Applicants who wish to be considered for an ESRC award must first register their interest. To do this they need to send two emails; one to the SGPE PhD Director, Liam Delaney at
Liam.Delaney@stir.ac.uk (cc'ing sgpe.admissions@ed.ac.uk) and the other to the PhD coordinator at the department at the at which they are interested in pursuing their PhD (see below). These emails must be sent by Friday the 8th of April 2011. The coordinators are the relevant Dapartments are:

Aberdeen: Ioannis Theodossiou
Dundee: Hassan Molana
Edinburgh: Ed Hopkins
Glasgow: Kostas Angelopoulos
Heriot-Watt: David Cobham
St. Andrews: Paola Manzini
Stirling: Ian Lange
Strathclyde: Julia Darby

Applicants who register their interest will receive detailed instructions by email on how to apply.

In brief, these instructions will ask students to (1) identify a research topic, the SGPE University where they intend to pursue their PhD, and a specific supervisor within the SGPE, (2) provide details of their relevant degree and degree courses and (3) write a short research proposal, and (4) provide a letter of support from the relevant University department where PhD study is planned. The deadline for receipt of full applications is 4pm, 3 May 2011.

Successful applicants will hear back by Friday the 20th of May.

12. Carnegie Trust Research Grants
Open to established members of academic staff or retired members of staff of Scottish Universities. The Trust can help established members of academic staff (full-time or part-time) and retired members of staff of a Scottish University to undertake personal research by the provision of small research grants (maximum £2,200).  The grants are awarded for travel and accommodation expenses incurred while undertaking the project for up to three months.
Applications for grants are considered by the Executive Committee of the Trust in February, June, and November.  Closing dates for applications are 15th January, May, or October respectively.  Applications for Research Grants of £1000 and under will be considered at any time in the year and a decision notified to the applicant as soon as possible.  Applications should be returned electronically and a hard signed copy in the post. 


13. Carnegie Larger Grants
Applications for Larger Grants, up to £40,000, may be made for projects which are of potential benefit to the Scottish universities as a whole and which involve active collaboration between two or more Scottish universities with one university acting as the lead applicant. These grants are not intended for research projects of a kind that would be submitted to a research council, and projects that have failed to secure funding from a council are not appropriate. The Trust does not necessarily expect to be the sole funder of a project. Prospective applicants are invited to discuss their proposals with the Trust's Secretary.  In 2011-12 there will be only one meeting for Larger Grants which will be held in May 2012 with a closing date for applications of 1st  February 2012.  Applicants may be asked to interview.


14. Carnegie Professorships
To mark the centenary of the founding of the Trust in 1901, the Executive Committee has established a scheme of visiting professorships, each valued at up to £40,000, intended to benefit not only the host Universities but also the Scottish university community as a whole.
The aim of the scheme is to attract nominees of the highest academic standing who will contribute to academic/scientific developments in the Scottish Universities in their particular fields, whether in teaching or research or in both, in emerging as well as established disciplines or in interdisciplinary fields.  The roles they fulfil will depend in part on the discipline.  There will also be the possibility of attracting senior scholars of high distinction who, by their very presence, will confer benefits on the Scottish universities.
Nominations are made by invitation and normally from the Principals of the Scottish Universities.  The Committee agreed that a period of ‘quarantine’ for universities who are awarded a Professorship would run until the end of the academic year in which a given University’s previous Professorship was held (until July of that year).
Nominations for the tenure of a Chair in 2015 should be submitted by 31 July 2012. 


15. Nuffield Foundation
The Foundation currently has four grant programmes that support research and innovation.
Children and Families - helps to ensure that the legal and institutional framework is best adapted to meet the needs of children and families.
Education -  supports innovative research and development in specific priority areas. 
Law in Society - promotes access to, and understanding of, the civil justice system.
Open Door - for projects that improve social well-being, and meet Trustees' wider interests, but lie outside the three programme areas above. 
Grants are mainly for research (usually carried out in universities or independent research institutes) but are also made for practical developments or innovation (often in voluntary sector organisations). As an independent Foundation, we are well placed to deal with sensitive issues, to challenge fashions and tacit assumptions. We support people with creative ideas to identify change or interventions which will have a practical impact for researchers, policy makers and practitioners.
We do not fund the ongoing costs of existing work or services, or research that simply advances knowledge.
16. Medical Research Council Fellowships

(a). Career Development Award
Up to 5 years support for outstanding post-doctoral researchers who wish to consolidate their research skills.
http://www.mrc.ac.uk/Fundingopportunities/Fellowships/Careerdevelopmentaward/MRC001825
This fellowship competition is held twice a year, however applicants may only apply to one CDA competition in any 12 month period.
Closing date: 28 February 2012
Short listing: September 2012
Interviews: 10 - 11 October 2012


(b). Early Career Fellowships in Economics of Health
http://www.mrc.ac.uk/Fundingopportunities/Fellowships/Earlycareerpostdoctoral/MRC004705

The MRC fellowship provides up to three years early-career support to help individuals begin to establish a research track record in the field and to undertake further training.

The competition is open to applicants with some advanced training in any field of economics who can demonstrate the transferability of their research skills to the field of the economics of health. Applicants must either have a PhD/DPhil or expect to do so by the time of take-up of the award, and must be early career and not have more than three years (full-time equivalent) post-doctoral experience. Applicants should hold a PhD or DPhil in either economics or one that combines training in economics with research in related areas (for example, statistics, and epidemiology).

Closing date: 6 October 2011
Short listing: February 2012
Decision meeting: 14-16 March 20012
Take up dates: April 2012 – September 2012

(c). Methodology Research Fellowships

http://www.mrc.ac.uk/Fundingopportunities/Fellowships/Methodologyresearch/MRC004706
The scheme is open to applicants who wish to pursue development, validation and application of innovative methodologies in one or more of the following disciplines: health economics; biostatistics, bioinformatics; modeling, decision sciences, epidemiology; clinical trials; behavioural sciences; health psychology, qualitative methodologies and mixed methods, medical sociology and medical geography.
Closing date: 6 October 2011
Short listing: February 2012
Interviews: 14-16 March 2012
Take up dates: April 2012 – September 2012

(d). Senior non-Clinical Fellowship
http://www.mrc.ac.uk/Fundingopportunities/Fellowships/Seniornonclinical/MRC001826
A highly prestigious award that provides non-clinical researchers of exceptional ability with exceptional opportunities to develop themselves to be research leaders. Applicants will be proven independent researchers with a track record of excellence in their scientific field, and will demonstrate significant promise as future research leaders. Support is now provided for seven years. Applicants will normally hold a PhD/DPhil and have at least six years' post-doctoral research experience in academia or the wider economy.  MRC fellowships are not available to individuals who hold a tenured academic or research position, in the UK or overseas, at the time of application.
Closing date: 28 February 2012
Short listing: September 2012
Interviews: 10 - 11 October 2012
Take up dates: November 2012 - April 2013

17. Medical Research Council Grants
(a). Methodology Research
Methodology research covers a broad area. For the purposes of obtaining funding from the MRC, methodology research includes methods development to underpin the biomedical sciences, experimental medicine, clinical trials, population health sciences, health services research and health policy.
Application deadlines are usually in January, May and September. All proposals are assessed by external experts before they are considered by the MRC research boards at their meetings in June/July, October/November and February/March.
Submissions by 4pm              Peer-review                            Panel meeting

5 October 2011                                   November - February              6 – 7 March 2012

9 February 2012                      March - June                           19 – 20 July 2012

14 June 2012                           July - October                         21 – 22 November 2012

(b). MRC Industry Collaboration Agreement (MICA)
Supporting collaborative research between academia and industry.
Any research proposal involving a collaboration with one or more industrial partners (contributing either in cash or in kind) is handled by MRC as a MICA. MICA is not a scheme in itself, but a mechanism to support the establishment of an agreement between academic and industry research partners, which can be applied to the majority of MRC’s funding schemes and calls (to find out if you can apply a MICA to your proposal, please refer to your specific scheme or call). MICA facilitates collaboration as it allows partners to work out and clearly specify arrangements for relative responsibilities, governance, regulatory approvals, indemnity, intellectual property rights, reporting, and access to data and samples before a project starts. In addition, MICAs help to establish that proposed collaboration arrangements are eligible under EU State-Aid regulations for MRC funding.
The application deadlines are those of the chosen funding scheme.
(c). New Investigator Research Grant
http://www.mrc.ac.uk/Fundingopportunities/Grants/NIRG/MRC001733
New Investigator Research Grants provide support for clinical and non-clinical researchers while they are establishing themselves as independent principal investigators.
Applicants must be based at a UK institution and hold a PhD, DPhil or an MD. They should either be at the start of their first lecturer appointment (they must be aiming for a research board deadline which falls within the first three years of taking up the post) and have a minimum of three years post qualification research experience or be in a senior post-doctoral (non-lecturer) position and have between three and ten years post qualification research experience.
Application deadlines are usually in January, May and September. All proposals are assessed by external experts before they are considered by the MRC research boards at their meetings in May/June, October/November and February/March.
(e). Partnership Grant
The partnership grant aims to provide support for collaborative activities that add value to existing research or helps galvanise researchers in a particular field, or complementary fields, to address important issues that cannot be addressed through other funding arrangements.
Your outline proposal must be submitted through the MRC Je-S system by 4pm on the relevant Partnership Outline deadline date. Your full proposal must be submitted through the MRC Je-S system by 4pm on the relevant Research Board's deadline date.
Deadline for outline submission, Population and Systems Medicine Board: 7 December 2011


18. Scottish Universities Insight Institute


Details of the various knowledge exchange possibilities are here 

19. Education Endowment Fund

Fund a range of projects on education policy. Link here 

Thursday, April 05, 2012

Liam Delaney Prize Farmer

Just to clarify and to save time on all the emails, this is a different Liam Delaney

CIISN Health in Crisis Conference

Sarah Gibney and Marcella McGovern will present at the Critical Issues in Irish Society Network (CIISN) Health in Crisis Conference in UCD on April 19th. Further details below.

Dear colleague,

We are pleased to announce that registration is now open for the CIISN Health in Crisis Conference on Thursday 19th April 2012, Seminar Room, Humanities Institute, University College Dublin. Please see attached poster for the conference outline.

This conference will bring together PhD students, researchers and prominent international academics, as well as health campaigners in the public eye to discuss issues critical to health and well-being in our society. It will offer researchers the opportunity to network, as well as a chance to reach new audiences within and beyond the academic sphere.

Speakers include:

Professor Eamon O'Shea (Irish Center for Social Gerontology,NUI Galway)
Dr Noel Richardson (Director of Center for Men's Health,CIT)
Orla Tinsley (Cystic Fibrosis Campaigner)