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Theory and Practice

Experimental Economics

John A. List
Experimental Economics: Theory and Practice is the definitive textbook for researchers and students who want to master the science of causal inference through experimentation. Written by John A. List—one of the world's foremost field experimenters—it builds from first principles to cutting-edge practice, covering everything from the potential outcomes framework and randomization design to ethics, generalizability, and scaling. Whether you're running your first lab experiment or designing a large-scale natural field experiment, this book gives you the theory and tools to do it credibly.
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Experimental Economics

A landmark practical guide from the twenty-first-century pioneer in economics.

Leveraging the experimental method has become increasingly popular amongst economists. Experimental economics has been used to explore a wide range of questions such as determining optimal pricing or how to best incentivize teacher performance. Given the several merits of the experimental method, many are now recognizing it as the gold method for understanding causal effects. But until now the discipline has lacked comprehensive and definitive guidance for how to optimally design and conduct economic experiments.

For more than 30 years, John A. List has been at the forefront of using experiments to advance economic knowledge, expanding the domain of economic experiment from the lab to the real-world. Experimental Economics is his A-to-Z compendium for students and researchers on the ground floor of designing and conducting experiments and later analyzing and interpreting the generated data. List seeks not only to guide readers on how to develop and implement their experimental projects—everything from design to administrative and ethical considerations—but to help them avoid all the mistakes he has made in his career, too. Experimental Economics codifies its author’s refined approach to the design, execution, and analysis of laboratory and field experiments. It is a milestone work poised to become the definitive reference for the next century of experimental economics and economists.

John A. List, Kenneth C. Griffin Distinguished Service Professor in Economics, The University of Chicago
Acclaim for Experimental Economics
Amazing, just amazing resource. You can't believe how helpful it has been and it's going to be, not only for the material itself but also for how to structure the course. I've always been torn between making the course a methods vs. topics course, and this allows both, as the running examples can be used to expose students to different topics of application.
Seda ErtacProfessor, Koc University, Department of Economics

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