Summary:
I always like looking at the data for other countries than the US — laziness and the ease of accessing FRED data are big reasons for most of the models being tested on US data. Additionally, the political economy of the US tends to bring up more US-centric questions.I'm also not very well informed about a lot of the political economy and economic history of other countries. This is both good and bad. It's good because it means I don't go modeling the data with a preconceived economic history; it's bad because I don't necessarily have decent intuitive explanations for what the models uncover. I'd be appreciative for any information about the economic history of India beyond my rudimentary knowledge above in comments. Information Transfer EconomicsEconomic growth in IndiaJason Smith
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: India, Indian economic, Indian economic history, information transfer economics
This could be interesting, too:
I always like looking at the data for other countries than the US — laziness and the ease of accessing FRED data are big reasons for most of the models being tested on US data. Additionally, the political economy of the US tends to bring up more US-centric questions.I'm also not very well informed about a lot of the political economy and economic history of other countries. This is both good and bad. It's good because it means I don't go modeling the data with a preconceived economic history; it's bad because I don't necessarily have decent intuitive explanations for what the models uncover. I'd be appreciative for any information about the economic history of India beyond my rudimentary knowledge above in comments. Information Transfer EconomicsEconomic growth in IndiaJason Smith
Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: India, Indian economic, Indian economic history, information transfer economics
This could be interesting, too:
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I always like looking at the data for other countries than the US — laziness and the ease of accessing FRED data are big reasons for most of the models being tested on US data. Additionally, the political economy of the US tends to bring up more US-centric questions.Information Transfer Economics
I'm also not very well informed about a lot of the political economy and economic history of other countries. This is both good and bad. It's good because it means I don't go modeling the data with a preconceived economic history; it's bad because I don't necessarily have decent intuitive explanations for what the models uncover. I'd be appreciative for any information about the economic history of India beyond my rudimentary knowledge above in comments.
Economic growth in India
Jason Smith