Ph.D. Thesis Research: Where do I Start?
If you are the next Paul Samuelson and will wholly transform the field of economics, payno heed. If you are the next Ken Arrow and will invent a new branch of economics, thesenotes are not for you. The aim here is more humble: to provide strategies for identifyingexciting thesis research topics for the rest of us.There is no algorithm that yields an exciting thesis. Too much depends on your energyand imagination. But there are more and less efficient ways of trying to identify excitingtopics. And I will try to convey at least my own aesthetics about what interesting researchis about. These may vary a bit by sub-field and certainly across economists, so certainlyseek out others’ perspectives. So, ignore these suggestions if you choose – but have agood reason to do so.
How Do I Find “The Right Topic”?
First, there is no “Right Topic.” What is hot today may be ice cold by the time that yougo on the job market. You don’t want the nineteenth best paper of the year on a hot topic.Much more important is to find something that is important and genuinely interests you.There are great papers to be written in almost all fields. You need to settle on an areawhere you are sufficiently interested that you don’t mind making some investments, sincethese investments are preparing you not only for thesis work but also for your next roundof papers as an assistant professor.
Let me underscore that you should focus on an important problem. The lore of economicsincludes what is sometimes termed “Summers’ Law” (yes, after Larry). This holds that ittakes just as much time to write an unimportant paper as an important one. Hence . . . youmight as well work on important topics. (Note: This is not an incitement to work onbroad, vague topics!).
This is not as trivially obvious as it might first appear. Lets start with a first fact: Most ofeconomics is boring. No, I don’t mean this in the way that the public at large means it; onthe contrary, I think that economics done well can be beautiful and fascinating. What Imean is that most writing on economics is boring because: (1) It does not addressinteresting questions; (2) It has nothing new to add that is itself important; or (3) Even ifthe researcher does in fact have something new and important to say, the researcher doessuch a poor job of articulating this that the reader has little chance of figuring this out.
How do I know if I have an interesting topic?
First, be aware that “interesting” inevitably has a subjective, aesthetic component. So wecannot expect to find necessary and sufficient conditions for an interesting topic.Nonetheless, there are useful indicators.When I undertake a research project, I find it a useful artifice to think of one of the moreskeptical members of the profession repeatedly pressing me with the question: “Whyshould I care?” How am I going to convince this skeptic that she should pay attention tomy research? One part of the answer is that I am asking and answering a question that has somesubstantive real-world counterpart. Moreover, I would also like to be able to argue thatthe issue is an important one. Hence, real-world examples can be influential andmagnitudes matter. In trying to convince yourself (and others), you should be as concreteas possible in explaining both the type of problem to which this applies and what themagnitude of the problem is. #p#分頁標題#e#
Certainly an indicator (not a proof!) that a problem is interesting is that good minds havespent time thinking about it. I note this because most economists will grant the prior thatif several leaders in a certain field have struggled with a problem, it is likely to be animportant question (i.e. if these people spent most of their time struggling withunimportant problems, they would be unlikely to be leaders in their field!). But youshould rely on this only as an indicator. You should be able to tell an independent storyabout why the area is important. Moreover, working on areas well combed over by theleaders of the field also has a number of pitfalls, discussed more fully below.
Let’s assume now that you have made a convincing case that the problem that you areaddressing is one that we do care about – i.e. it is one with a real world counterpart ofsome significant magnitude. How do you convince your reader that you have somethingnew and important to say about the problem? Let me stop to emphasize both new andimportant.
New. In economics, as elsewhere, you are going to be paid by your marginal – not youraverage – product. Solow’s model of economic growth won him a chair at MIT and theNobel Prize, but you will be less successful if you write it down again. You mayconvince us that it addresses an important problem, but there may be nothing in what youhave done that is new.
How do you know if what you are doing is new? One answer is to go back and read theentire history of the literature in your particular area. This is a tempting option as you cansurely convince yourself and your advisers that you are working hard. Unfortunately it isalso a very inefficient path, more likely to mire you in controversies that are old andforgotten for good reason than to show the path forward. The first step should surely beto talk to someone actually working in the area or at least reasonably familiar with it tofind out if someone has already answered the question you are pondering (your adviser ishopefully a good starting point). Second, one can look at recent surveys of the literatureor recent working papers directly on the topic as coming close to providing a “sufficientstatistic” for what has been done before in the area. This can be extremely useful, but youshould at least be aware that even serious academic work often contains “spin” that maytend to understate the accomplishments of older literatures relative to recent (especiallythose that the author has contributed to). Third, naturally Econlit and the Social ScienceCitation Index can be extremely helpful in identifying related work and should beconsulted carefully. If you are not familiar with both of these, you should stop readingthis very instant and return once you have figured out how they are used!
Let’s assume now that you have convinced us that you are working on an importantproblem with real-world counterparts and that matter in substantive terms, and moreoverthat your approach to the problem is new. How do you convince us that the work that youwill show us is important? We all know of important papers that have launched vastliteratures. But much of the resulting literature ends up in third-tier journals if it ispublished at all. Occasionally a paper, even in a huge literature, rises to the topnonetheless.#p#分頁標題#e#
Why the different outcomes?
The key, I think, is to convince readers that the novel element in your paper is in factimportant. How do you do this? The threshold is that after reading your paper,researchers familiar with the literature in your area should see the world differently. Howto do this varies to a certain extent based on whether you are writing in theory orempirics. If it’s a theory paper, one element would be if there is a problem that peoplehave understood is important but have not known how to solve. If you can make anadvance of this type, that will be very impressive. A second possibility is that there is anoutcome that, under reasonable assumptions, people had not thought possible. If you canshow that this outcome is indeed possible, then this can be very impressive as well. Note,though, the clause “under reasonable assumptions”! One important element of theproblem may be to establish that in fact the type of assumptions that you make are morereasonable than those that the prior literature makes (or at least no less reasonable).If you are working on an empirical topic, again it is not sufficient to do something that isnew. You have to convince us it is important. Taking someone else’s regression modeland adding a new variable that turns out to be statistically significant may be okay for aneconometrics exercise, but will it land your paper in a top journal? To start, we have to besure that you have already met our prior questions that the over all question you addressis important and that what you are doing is new. For an empirical paper, we must thenask whether there is good theoretical motivation for the inclusion of the new variable.Are we including it in the regression analysis in an appropriate way? In addition tostatistical significance, do we also have “economic significance” – i.e. are the magnitudeseconomically important. In the end, we are faced with the same question as in theory:After reading your study, will the leading researchers in the field be forced to look at thearea in a way differently than they did before and in a way that matters substantively. Ifyes, then you have a nice paper that you should send to a top journal. If not, then maybeyou should think again about the value of the project.
A similar set of questions arise if you make a larger departure in your empiricalframework. Is there a strong tie between the theory and the empirical framework chosen?Is the approach sufficiently well motivated, both by the theory and the econometricsunderlying the specification, that the results of the study are likely to move people’spriors about the economic magnitudes at issue? It is true that the profession tends to grantmore latitude to researchers who are trying to address an interesting new problemempirically, partly on the idea that follow-on work may help to elaborate the robustnessof the framework. But the basic framework must be sufficiently compelling that theresults will have some power in influencing people’s priors. That is, the results have to beconvincing. #p#分頁標題#e#www.mythingswp7.com
Before moving on to more practical matters, let us summarize what has come before. Youshould choose a topic that is demonstrably important, that has elements which arethemselves new and important, and the resulting study should be both reasonable andconvincing. One summary test for this is to ask: If the study proceeds well, can Iplausibly hope to have it accepted at a first-tier journal (AER, JPE, QJE, etc.)? If theanswer is “no,” then perhaps you should spend a bit more time identifying a topic forwhich the answer is “yes.” It is an unfortunate fact that even the things you find verycompelling may not ultimately convince the rest of the profession that they should be in atop journal. But you will almost certainly fail to get there if you do not ask yourself thisquestion at the outset.
Where do I start? Strategies for Research:The foregoing has tried to identify markers of good research projects, questions youshould be asking yourself as you proceed in your thesis work. But there are also morepragmatic questions about how to identify good research projects, how to spend yourtime, etc.
There is no unique path to identifying a good research project. Some might findinspiration in Adam Smith. Some might find inspiration in Fred Flintstone. So thefollowing suggestions point to areas where I think the probability mass is concentrated.
If you want to write applied theory, read empirics.
My aesthetics are that the most interesting work in economics must have some realsubstantial contact with both theory and empirics. The number of internally consistenttheoretical economic models that can be written down is unbounded. But which areinteresting? Which are papers that you might want to send to a top journal? If you areGerard Debreu, you may end up writing very abstract models, but the profession as awhole does not have any problem understanding the importance of a consistent statementof conditions for the existence of a competitive equilibrium. For those who are going todo more applied theory, the threshold for it being interesting rises substantially in termsof finding an empirical counterpart. Interesting applied theory is not just looking downthe matrix of combinations of possible assumptions to find cells that have not been filledin. Again, the number of these is unbounded. Instead, the key is to find why, having filledin one of those cells, the reader should think that this is an interesting cell to have filled.Being able to point to empirical facts that would be hard to understand given existingtheories is one very important way to convince your reader that your paper is essential,not clutter, and the more important those facts, the more important the contribution of thetheory (holding fixed the “wow” factor of the technical contributions).
If you want to write empirics, read theory. #p#分頁標題#e#
For those who plan to write in empirics, there are several good reasons to steep yourselfin theory. The first is simply because you would like to have your empirical work placesome intellectual capital on the line. What views of the world will we affirm or abandon(strengthen or weaken) on the basis of your empirical work? If you do not have an answerto this, then the empirical work will not be very exciting. Yes, sometimes we just want toestimate an elasticity and we can tell a story about why we care about it. If the approachto estimation has some novel and important element, that can be its own justification.Failing this, the excitement in empirical work is to cast doubt on/rule out some views ofthe world that people might otherwise have maintained. A second reason for readingtheory is simply that the more closely your empirical work is tied to the underlyingtheory, the more convincing will be the resulting estimates.There is a “Research Frontier”; Your job is to find it.Some questions in the field have been answered, or approaches so exhaustively exploredthat it is nearly impossible to identify topics or questions able to move people’s priors.On the other hand, there is often a set of questions that the leaders in the field arecurrently struggling with and may be very far from having definitive answers. Being ableto weigh in on these problems with a new insight (and avoid dead topics) is an importantstep. So much of your work is “finding the frontier.”
Go to weekly departmental seminars in your field.
This may be a direct source of ideas for research. After all, the speakers are selected forbeing leaders in the field and they are presenting their research that is usually at theworking paper stage. In addition, it is important to watch how those who have beensuccessful in the field structure their inquiry. Do they convince you that they are dealingwith a question that is important, that they have something new and important tocontribute to this, and that the contribution they make is reasonable and compelling?Often the answer will be no. It is important to see why this is the case, where they fallshort. These will be important lessons as you develop your own research.Go to seminars of potential new assistant professors at your school.They are in the position you want to be in within a couple or a few years. Why not go tosee which ones fly and which ones dive and to figure out why. In addition, if they happento be in an area that interests you, they are likely to be very much at the frontier.Read the working papers of the intellectual leaders in your narrowly focusedresearch area.
This combines two ideas. The first is that within any reasonably-narrowly defined area ofeconomics, there is usually only a small set of people who consistently push forward thefrontiers of research. One of your early exercises is to identify this research communityand find out what the problems are which they are struggling with currently. (Of course,do be aware that sometimes these leaders may be at seemingly unlikely places!). Ofcourse, the rise of the web makes this vastly simpler than it was only a few years back.Check out their web pages; check the NBER; check the CEPR. Again, the premise is thatcurrent work is close to (but not exactly!) a sufficient statistic for what has come before.Take advantage of this. #p#分頁標題#e#
Read the best journals selectively.
There are a couple of issues here. The first is that material in the journals is inevitablydated. An empirical project may involve conceptualizing the problem, waiting for a grantapproval, gathering and cleaning data, getting the software programs up and running,doing first runs, writing a paper, issuing it as a working paper, sending it to journals,getting rejections, doing revisions, submitting a final draft, and waiting for it to finallyappear. Thus the paper in the issue that arrived today may reflect the state of thinking fiveyears ago! On the other hand, you should expose yourself to material broader than yourown research project, for two key reasons. The first is that there may be unexpectedsynergies between work in other fields and your own inquiries. Many economists havemade a career out of exploring just one or a couple of those synergies. Second, by readingsome of the best research and by looking at it with the appropriate questions in mind, youcan come to understand concretely what the profession recognizes as outstandingresearch.
Talk, Talk, Talk! Write, Write, Write!
Interaction with your professors and your fellow students is where a lot of your ideasshould come from. Moreover, this is not a passive process. Often it is in the course oftrying to articulate something that you think that you understand that you find the weakpoint in the logic of prior work, which then points you in the direction of somethingexciting. Trying to articulate things, both orally and in writing, is an important part of theprocess.
Question Authority! www.mythingswp7.com
Economics, or academics more generally, is not a place for reverence! Read what is beingwritten in your field, recognize the contributions that have come in the prior literature,but do not be awed by it. Question everything. Try to state the arguments in your ownwords. Do you find the arguments convincing? Are there some lapses in the broaderclaims that are made? Often these will be the paths open for new and interesting papers.While one should respect prior work for having brought the field as far as it has come,every step forward begins by recognizing the limitations of what has come before. If youlook at the prior work too reverently, it will be hard to see these steps forward.
Don’t Take Courses!By the third year of a PhD program, your job is research, not more courses! You can takemore courses (of course), but you should have a very good reason for doing so.Acceptable reasons include (a) It is a course that takes you to the frontier of research inan area in which you plan to do research or (b) It develops mathematical or econometrictechniques that you plan to use in short order. The reason that I advise not taking coursesis that it is a convenient, comforting, and seemingly rationalizable way of avoiding theharder, more frustrating, but necessary conversion from being a consumer of research tobeing a producer of research. Focus on your primary task – developing your own researchprogram. #p#分頁標題#e#
Don’t teach!. . . more than you have to. For many, teaching is attached to a stipend or is otherwiseeconomically unavoidable. In this case, do what you must! Moreover, there are some realintellectual and practical advantages from doing a couple of terms of TA work.Explaining the concepts to others is very useful in consolidating them in yourself. Butbeyond this, the returns become strongly negative. Your job is research – and anythingthat distracts you from this is a heavy cost. The first cost, which may seem remote at thetime that you are deciding on the teaching, is that it could delay completion of the thesisby a year or more. An even larger cost is if it crowds out time to write a really greatthesis. As a PhD student, your time is very valuable; treat it that way. Dealing with advisors.
Advisors want you to succeed. We would love to have Harvard or MIT pursuing all ofour students. Engage your advisers with ideas. Do not be afraid to speak up – the risks ofsaying nothing far outweigh the costs of occasionally saying something stupid (so long asyou also occasionally say something interesting!). These contacts can be very importantin allowing the adviser to eventually speak of you with confidence at the time you go onthe market. Also, don’t wait to write a whole paper before running ideas by yourprofessors. They may be able to save you lots of time by asking pointed questions early.You don’t have to accept what they say, but have a good reason for ignoring their advice.
Your advisor is too nice!
Believe it or not, your advisors like you! They like you both as a younger colleague andas a human being. And therein lies a big potential problem for you: Your advisor may betoo nice! The job market, by contrast, can be cruel. Potential employers, such asprofessors at other schools, just don’t share the same warm, fuzzy feelings for you asyour advisors. They are going to pay good money for a product (you) that, for better orworse, in sickness and in health . . . they will have to live with for years to come. Oneconsequence of this asymmetry is that, in spite of their best efforts, advisors may fail toask some tough, probing questions about your thesis work that you will not be able toavoid once you are on the market. How do you deal with this? The first is simply to askyour advisors to be as frank and critical as they are able when reviewing your work.Better to have this done by someone who likes you and wants you to succeed than for itto be done by someone who just relishes the opportunity to dissect a job marketcandidate. Second, diversify. If you can’t find more than one or a couple of advisers whothink that what you are doing is interesting and important, then perhaps you should thinkover the topic again.
Present your work whenever possible.
Sign up to present in student seminars. Deadlines help to focus the mind and you learn alot both about what works and what doesn’t by practice. Ask the students on the jobmarket currently: Are their seminars at the end of the market much better than at theoutset. Almost inevitably the answer is “yes” and by a large margin. Experience matters.Consider writing your first paper jointly. #p#分頁標題#e#
One of the biggest obstacles in writing a thesis is getting the first paper written. One wayto make this first step easier is to write a joint paper. There are several advantages to this.The first is that it is much harder to become thoroughly stalled on a project that you areworking on with someone else. Neither wants to be seen as the sluggard. Second, you arelikely to write a better paper together than either separately, simply because you bringdifferent skills. Third, this may give you a good start to having a publication even as yougo on the job market. Finally, it is fun. So who do you write with? Writing with anotherPhD student is one good option. You start out on equal terms, can share all aspects of theproject, and can usually devote large chunks of time to it. An alternative is to write onepaper with one of your professors. This has some big pluses, but potentially also someminuses. How you figure the balance depends on the particular opportunities you have.One big plus is simply that they have more experience in judging whether a particularline of research is likely to be fruitful, what methods are appropriate, and how to write thepaper up in a manner that is appealing to the journals. After all, these are the skills thatgot them their position in the first place! The biggest plus may simply be the opportunityto see at first hand the choices and decisions that are made at various stages of a researchproject by someone with a track record for successful research. But there are somepotential minuses as well. It is a fact of life that the profession tends to assume that theintellectual heavy lifting in a paper was done by the professor even if the professor standsready to swear that it was a fully equal project (and even if the reality is that the studentmay have done a more than equal share!). This is a good reason why you do not wantyour main job market paper to be joint with a professor (and why it is also best not tohave the job market paper be any joint paper). But getting the first paper written andpossibly accepted at a journal even as you are writing your main job market paper onyour own can be a big plus.
Writing matters.
Your job as a researcher is not only to create new knowledge, but also to communicate iteffectively. You cannot persuade your reader that you have done something important ifthey cannot figure out what you did or why even you think it is important. Bad writingoften accompanies muddled thinking. State theses clearly and precisely and you may beable to see where the gaps are that need to be filled in. If your topic is boring, eventransparent writing cannot rescue it. But leaden prose may lead many readers to give upon a paper that, written more clearly and precisely, they might find pretty interesting.Moreover, especially early in your career, the reader is unlikely to have a strongcommitment to slogging through your writings. If you make the task loathsome, thereader will simply stop. Make life easy for your reader. Help her to identify simply andprecisely the contributions of your paper.Presentation matters. #p#分頁標題#e#
The same lessons hold for seminar presentations – only more so. You should be able tosummarize what question you are asking, why it is important, what is new, and what youwill do to convince the seminar attendee in no more than a few sentences. If you cannotdo this in perfectly intelligible English, then you do not understand your own topic wellenough. All other versions of your presentation should be looked on as simpleelaborations of this core set of ideas. Why? The profession needs a simple take-away ideafrom your paper that is memorable. The successive elaborations reflect the fact that indifferent fora (face-to-face meeting, formal job interview, job market seminar), you willneed to take the same message and make it successively richer, more nuanced. This isnever more important than when you are on the job market, when you have to speak to abroad range of economists rather than specialists in your own field. Inspiration is where you find it.
Maybe this is a disclaimer. In the end, there can be no rules for finding a thesis topic,since it can’t be mechanical. Much depends on your creativity and inspiration, yourinsightfulness and energy. A bit of magic is required. If your adviser tells you to stopworking on such and such problem and to return to problem X where you were working,they probably know what they are talking about, but then again they may be wrong. Youshould listen to what they have to say, but be willing to make the substantive judgmentthat they are wrong. How do you create your own magic? Some people say their bestideas come when they are in the shower, or playing raquetball, or . . . . I’m not sure theanswer is that I should direct you to take lots of showers! You have to find your ownmuse. Success and failure, in the end, are in your hands only. www.mythingswp7.com
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