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<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="http://enterpriseinitiative.org/utility/FeedStylesheets/rss.xsl" media="screen"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"><channel><title>Search results matching tags 'Townsend' and 'AGE3'</title><link>http://enterpriseinitiative.org/search/SearchResults.aspx?o=DateDescending&amp;tag=Townsend,AGE3&amp;orTags=0</link><description>Search results matching tags 'Townsend' and 'AGE3'</description><dc:language>en-US</dc:language><generator>CommunityServer 2007.1 (Debug Build: 20917.1142)</generator><item><title>Templeton Foundation Highlights Enterprise Initiative's Work</title><link>http://enterpriseinitiative.org/blogs/news/archive/2009/02/04/templeton-foundation-highlights-enterprise-initiative-s-work.aspx</link><pubDate>Wed, 04 Feb 2009 20:58:00 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">f87bcdfb-abed-4271-9de5-438eeffceea3:48</guid><dc:creator>admin</dc:creator><description>&lt;p&gt;&amp;quot;We actually are the ones being trained by the successful individuals who are out there -- we learn from them, from what they do, and how they overcome obstacles.&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp; That is the modest analysis offered by Professor Robert Townsend of the ambitious program over
which he is presiding, funded by a $3.3 million Templeton grant,
&amp;quot;Discovering the Power of Free Enterprise to Create Wealth and
Alleviate Poverty Through a New Applied General Equilibrium Enterprise.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The shorthand name for the project is &amp;quot;The Enterprise Initiative&amp;quot; and
it is a collaborative effort between senior researchers at three major
institutions: the University of Chicago, the Poverty Action Lab at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Economic Growth Center
at Yale University.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Robert Townsend, the principal investigator, is the Charles E. Merriam
Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of
Chicago. His research on risk and insurance in village India won the
Frisch Medal in 1998 and for the past ten years he has conducted
extensive field research on enterprise in Thailand. He has played
important roles in the Federal Reserve Banks and Board, World Bank,
InterAmerican Development Bank, Millennium Challenge Corporation and
the International Monetary Fund and has been a frequent collaborator
with colleagues at MIT and Yale, so that he is well-qualified to act as
a bridge builder for this complex project.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The senior research team includes four Nobel laureates from the
University of Chicago: Gary Becker, James J. Heckman, Robert E. Lucas,
Jr., and Roger Myerson who was awarded the Nobel Prize after the
program had been launched. Townsend describes his team as &amp;quot;a loose
network of scholars who are working to incorporate general themes and
approaches into each of their specific areas of expertise. At the
University of Chicago, he has been working with Fernando Alvarez on
financial decisions, Gary Becker and Kevin Murphy on issues of
inequality, Lars Hansen on modeling uncertainty, Jim Heckman on skills
and returns, and Bob Lucas on growth and geography, among others.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The two collaborator institutions have also been carefully integrated
into the overall program, contributing their specialist expertise. &amp;quot;At
Yale, I have been working with Chris Udry and Mark Rosenzweig to design
surveys that will allow us to look at a broader range of issues in
Ghana and Tamil Nadu and understand more fully how enterprise in these
countries affects overall economic growth and inequality. At MIT,
Abhijit Banerjee and I have initiated a project on the size
distribution of firms and how to test for credit constraints that may
limit firm growth.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The project also incorporates an anthropological element to the
economic inquiry. &amp;quot;It&amp;#39;s a natural marriage because you&amp;#39;re on the
ground, in the village, asking questions of households. Then it comes
down to how best to try to get the information you want. The researcher
has to win the respondents&amp;#39; confidence by changing the topic when
necessary, probing elliptically.&amp;quot; Townsend&amp;#39;s primary collaborator in
Thailand, Khun Sombat Sakunthasathien is a seasoned practitioner of
this art, merging it with the more formal and comprehensive survey
instruments.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;How does Townsend define Applied General Equilibrium Enterprise
Economics (AGE3)? &amp;quot;It&amp;#39;s basically to set the decisions of individuals,
whether they be firms or households, in the context of the larger
economy,&amp;quot; he says. &amp;quot;It&amp;#39;s a method more than an
application. Once you think about a small cluster of individuals in a
village as an economy and try to understand the village economy, which
I have done in some earlier work in India and, historically, in
England, the method would be to think about how the interaction of all
the individuals in the village works to produce the overall
equilibrium.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;This approach is counter-cultural among most economists, who would
instead take a sub-field such as price theory and then ask how consumer
purchases respond to prices. AGE3 researchers, in contrast, would want
to examine not only how prices in one market influence those in
another, but also more generally how to allow for all possible
feedbacks in the system. The program is developing a comprehensive,
interactive database archive with Geographic Information System
capability that allows researchers and policy makers to see the impact
of individuals&amp;#39; decisions and policy alternatives in action according
to rigorous, econometric models.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The program has impressive technical support, including the
computational expertise of Argonne National Laboratory and the
University of Chicago&amp;#39;s Computation Institute. It is also drawing upon
the intellectual capital of some 40 additional scholars through
topic-specific Enterprise Working Groups. It will also utilize the
exceptional data on the Thai economy that Townsend himself has
accumulated over the past decade, both from his own surveys and that of
government ministries.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The program is still in its early stages, the grant having begun in
August 2007, and will run until 2010. Already, however, the research is
progressing significantly. The first stage was one-on-one conversations
between researchers to determine the pattern of collaboration. These
individual collaborations, it is intended, will eventually fuse into
multi-authored research on enterprise, wealth, and poverty reduction,
involving mini-conferences and working groups.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Survey designs have already been revised to allow comparisons across
populations, while additional questions have been developed and added
to the Yale pre-test of surveys in Ghana and Tamil Nadu, enabling a
benchmark for future surveys in those countries. It has been decided to
add a new survey initiative in Cambodia, and Townsend is also pursuing
survey research in Chile on both the household and firm aspects of the
economy. He and Banerjee are also considering sampling frames for
collecting new data on the birth and evolution of enterprise in India
and Thailand.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;By any standards this is a major initiative. With the research impetus
well underway, the team has to prepare for stage two, the objective of
which is to influence opinion leaders by disseminating insights gained
and profferring practical advice through an extensive network of
relationships with government agencies, international development
organizations, and financial institutions worldwide.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Prospects for dissemination and outreach are good. The first resource
is a comprehensive website for the program, which went online in the
first part of 2008, facilitating research exchanges between current and
potential researchers, and will include a wiki and a discussion area to
encourage collaboration online. Postdoctoral, graduate students and
faculty at Chicago, Yale, and MIT are now involved in an enterprise
economics exchange. Robert Jordan, in collaboration with Khun Sombat
Sakunthasathien and Townsend, is writing a preliminary book on the
Townsend Thai Data&amp;#39;s survey design and implementation which will be the
launch pad for a public discussion of enterprise economics survey
methodologies.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;What is at stake in this initiative is not just new insights into
wealth creation and poverty alleviation, but the challenge of
potentially reconfiguring the orthodoxy of enterprise economics
analysis. For AGE 3 is revolutionary in its concept. Townsend is well
aware that the Department of Economics at the University of Chicago was
the intellectual home of Friedrich von Hayek and Milton Friedman and so
the cradle of modern free market economics. He sees the potential for
AGE 3 to trigger a further revolutionary insight into the anatomy of
economies.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;quot;Overall, the Enterprise Initiative is an ambitious project,&amp;quot; he says.
&amp;quot;One of our ultimate goals that underlies nearly all of the project&amp;#39;s
objectives is to provide clear and sound information based on research
to policy makers, government officials, and NGOs so that they can
better evaluate policy options and make decisions with regard to
poverty alleviation.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;He emphasizes, however, that it is not part of his project&amp;#39;s remit to
undertake education of potential entrepreneurs: there are plenty of
training programs available around the world. Indeed he contends, as
quoted above, that it is his team that is being educated by the
examples of entrepreneurs in developing countries, as it gains insight
into their motivations and how they surmount difficulties.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;So, what is the really big question in relation to Applied General
Equilibrium economics and poverty alleviation? &amp;quot;What creates an
entrepreneur? That is the big question,&amp;quot; says Townsend. As regards an
answer, he and his team are still working on that. &amp;quot;It does seem that
education plays a role, that is to say formal education, the number of
years of schooling of household members, but it&amp;#39;s not a uniform effect.
It depends on the occupation, the region of the country, and it doesn&amp;#39;t
explain a lot of the variation in the success rate.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;One supposition his research has already enabled him definitely to
discount after studying case histories over eight years, &amp;quot;It&amp;#39;s not just
luck. It can&amp;#39;t be they just happened to get lucky year after year.&amp;quot;
What does he hope will be the eventual outcome, when the study is
complete? &amp;quot;Really to understand how economies are put together.&amp;quot;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;But Townsend has a larger ambition than that, one which, as this
extensive project takes shape, he is increasingly confident of
fulfilling. It is for AGE 3 to become the accepted system for
understanding the structure of economies. His prediction is bullish.
&amp;quot;It will become the new standard. We may not be there yet, but I&amp;#39;m
pretty confident. That&amp;#39;s our goal.&amp;quot;

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