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Papers that are related to the ARK "are in the ballpark"

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'In the ballpark' of the Econ-ARK ...

means papers or models that are closely related enough to be of interest to the kinds of people who are interested in the Econ-ARK.

These are papers that an ambitious graduate student might be able to turn into a course project in an advanced class in structural microeconomics, heterogeneous agent macroeconomics, or computational economics.

The papers mentioned here are of two kinds: Papers that

  1. Have serious structural models that produce interesting results
    • In the "models" directory
    • The objective: Replicate (or improve!) the quantitative theory
  2. Have strong empirical evidence that begs for a model
    • In the "empirical" directory
    • The objective: Construct a model that speaks to the results

We will be delighted to post any such contributions, under the name of the contributor, in:

  • The REMARK repo
    • if it is substantially complete replication of the paper's results
  • The DemARK repo
    • if it demonstrates some of the ideas or content of the paper

As an example of the kinds of things we are looking for, see the paper by Iskhakov et al cited below, which is instantiated in the Econ-ARK ecosystem in four ways, in increasing order of importance, in the Econ-ARK:

  1. As an entry in our public Zotero bibliographical database
  2. As a DemARK at
  3. As a REMARK at
  4. As a collection of tools under the name DCEGM
    • from HARK.DCEGM import *

The papers listed herein are a small subset of the ones that we would welcome into the Econ-ARK. If you want to work on a paper that is not listed here, post an "issue" on the repo asking (and providing a link and bibliographical reference for the paper in question). If it is likely to prove interesting to our audience, we are very likely to encourage you to replicate it.

References:

Iskhakov, F., Jørgensen, T.H., Rust, J., Schjerning, B., others, 2017. The endogenous grid method for discrete-continuous dynamic choice models with (or without) taste shocks. Quantitative Economics 8, 317–365.

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