EconLog

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EconLog is a group weblog on economics and related topics by Bryan Caplan, David R. Henderson, and Scott Sumner. Its founding blogger, Arnold Kling, stopped blogging for EconLog in August 2012. The blog is hosted and maintained by the Library of Economics and Liberty (Econlib) website.

Scope and aims

According to its "About" section:

EconLog aims to educate, entice, and excite readers into thinking about economics in daily analyses. It typically appeals to an international mix of college-educated students, teachers, news media commentators, and bloggers; self-educated or post-graduate thinkers; and those interested in understanding the ever-emerging current economic situation. Readers are invited to comment.[1]

Bloggers

EconLog has a staff of three people (Lauren Landsburg, Amy Willis, and Russ Roberts), three current regular bloggers (Bryan Caplan, David R. Henderson, and Scott Sumner) and many current and former guest bloggers. All regular bloggers and most guest bloggers have economics Ph.D.s, and the majority tend to have libertarian and generally free-market economic and cultural views. Typical occupations include academia, think tanks, and economic consulting, while institutional affiliations include George Mason University and the Mercatus Center, with the Cato Institute, Independent Institute, and the Hoover Institution also showing up.[2]

Blogger Status Day job Tenure at EconLog
Arnold Kling Founder, former regular blogger economist, adjunct scholar at Cato Institute, affiliated with Mercatus Center January 2003: Started EconLog as sole blogger. It was a successor to Kling's "Great Questions of Economics" series, which had been started in January 2002.[1]
August 2012: Quit regular blogging at EconLog in order to make time for other activities.[3] In November 2012, Kling resumed blogging on his personal blog instead of returning to EconLog.[4]
Bryan Caplan Regular blogger economics professor at George Mason University January 2005: Started blogging at EconLog as a guest blogger.[5] Subsequently became a regular blogger.[1]
David R. Henderson Regular blogger research fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution and is also associate professor of economics at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California October 2008: Started blogging at EconLog as a guest blogger.[1][6][7] Subsequently became a regular blogger.[1]
Scott Sumner Regular blogger Research Fellow at the Independent Institute, the Director of the Program on Monetary Policy at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University and an economist who teaches at Bentley University in Waltham, Massachusetts January 2014: Joined as a guest blogger.[8][9] Subsequently became a regular blogger.[1]
Garett Jones Former guest blogger economist at George Mason University, affiliated with Mercatus Center September 2012: Joined as a guest blogger.[10][11]
April 2013: Finished his blogging stint (last post April 30).[12][13]
Luigi Zingales Former guest blogger economist at University of Chicago October 2012: Joined as a guest blogger.[14] Zingales stops blogging after two months, but his departure was not officially announced.
Art Carden Former guest blogger economist at Samford University April 2013: Joined as a guest blogger.[15][16]
December 2013: Finished guest blogging stint (last post December 31).[17][18]
June 2014: Rejoined as as guest blogger.[19][20]
November 2014: Finished his second stint.[21]
Alberto Mingardi Current guest blogger director of the Italian free-market think tank Istituto Bruno Leoni June 2013: Joined as a guest blogger.[22][23]
Bart Wilson Former guest blogger Chair of Economics and Law at Chapman University's Business School August 2013: Joined as a guest blogger.[24]
December 2013: Finished his guest blogging stint (last post December 24, 2013).[25][26]
James Schneider Former guest blogger worked in economic consulting and health insurance, novelist on the side February 2014: Joined as a guest blogger.[27]
April 2014: Completed his guest blogging stint.[28][29]
Emily Skarbek Current guest blogger economics lecturer at King's College London, Ph.D. from George Mason University January 2016: Joined as a guest blogger.[30]

Reception

The Wall Street Journal, a US newspaper, listed EconLog in its list of top 25 economics blogs.[1][31] The New York Times mentioned EconLog in a list of notable economics blogs' reaction to the appointment of Ben Bernanke as Federal Reserve chairman in 2005.[32]

In July/August 2013, Onalytica Indexes ranked EconLog 12th in its list of top 200 economics blogs.[33]

EconLog blog entries have been referenced by many blogs and newspapers such as the New York Times Economix blog,[34] the Freakonomics blog,[35][36] Marginal Revolution,[37][38] and The American.[39]

EconLog bloggers frequently carry out open conversations with other bloggers including those at Marginal Revolution, Overcoming Bias, and Libertarianism.org.[citation needed]

See also

  • EconTalk, a biweekly economics podcast by Russ Roberts, also supported by the Library of Economics and Liberty.

References

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External links