Scholar

Simon Burgess

H-index: 54
Economics 36%
Education 30%
florianederer.bsky.social
We usually rely on GDP, trade, or wages to study the past. This amazing paper flips the script.

It analyzes 630,000 paintings (1400-2000) to extract emotions and shows how art tracks living standards, wars, inequality, and even climate shocks.

(How is this economics? Everything is economics!)
profsimonb.bsky.social
Go on … switch it … what could possibly go wrong ??? (Note that I disclaim any responsibility)

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

alvarolaparra.bsky.social
In one of the most US-academic move ever, he’s wearing sneakers. Institutions matter.
ivanwerning.bsky.social
A great party at MIT to not forget…

Celebrating Daron Acemoglu and his Nobel award!

Happy new in the room was brimming.

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

mattcollin.bsky.social
Evidence that some media has the opposite effect on kids than detractors often assert:

In the UK, when digital TV rolled out, disadvantaged kids spent more time at home watching TV (seems bad) but also less time hanging out with antisocial peers (actually good)

academic.oup.com/ej/advance-a...
henninghermes.com
We are looking for a postdoc to work on exciting RCTs circling around scaling up mentoring interventions, starting in July 2026 💪🏻🚀

Amazing team at @ifoeducation.bsky.social & the perfect place to thrive with ifo, @cesifo.org + @econmunich.bsky.social 🫶🏻🌟

Please share widely 🙏🙏

Link below 👇

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

joshua-goodman.com
Proud to have named this new seminar series designed to help education researchers navigate the new landscape we're in.

I hope the name conveys the optimism that there is a destination worth reaching on the other side of this.

Sign-up here for the first session: aefpweb.org/ev_calendar_...

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

dynarski.bsky.social
The Harvard Graduate School of Education started a small online master's program for education leaders during COVID

It has been a great success

Now we are launching an online program for *international* education leaders

Apps due in early July

www.gse.harvard.edu/degrees/mast...
theifs.bsky.social
NEW: Sure Start generated widespread, long-lasting benefits for children in education, health, absences, and SEND.

Every £1 of up-front spending on Sure Start could generate around £2 in total benefits over the long run.

THREAD on our new ‪@nuffieldfoundation.org‬-funded report:

[1/11]
Chart shows the effects of Sure Start on academic achievements by age, SEN support by age, probability of hospitalisation by age and criminal behaviour up to age 16.

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

paulhufe.net
Day 3 of the 2025 Bristol Applied Economics Meetings (BÆM)! After two fantastic days on development economics, we continue with the meeting on “Gender, Diversity, and Human Capital”. Stay tuned for some excellent papers!

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

eleonoraguarnieri.bsky.social
@saralowes.bsky.social delivers a keynote lecture on "Culture and Development Policy" discussing how culture shapes incentives, persists and evolves, and documenting cultural mismatches between policymakers and target populations
eleonoraguarnieri.bsky.social
Welcome to the 2025 Bristol Applied Economics Meetings (BÆM)! We’re kicking off with Development Economics. We have an exciting lineup of speakers, incl. @saralowes.bsky.social as keynote and Devesh Rustagi & @deanyang.bsky.social as invited speakers. Stay tuned for one key takeaway per talk!

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

johnholbein1.bsky.social
"ChatGPT as Economics Tutor: Capabilities and Limitations"

econpapers.repec.org/paper/briuob...

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

lindseymacmillan.bsky.social
This lunchtime
lindseymacmillan.bsky.social
If you want to hear more about our recent @nuffieldfoundation.org funded research on inequalities in access to professional occupations, join us at LSE on Thurs where I will present our work - joint with @clairetyler.bsky.social and Catherine Dilnot
lsesocialpolicy.bsky.social
📣 @lindseymacmillan.bsky.social will explore ‘Inequalities in Applications and Offers to Graduate Recruitment Programmes‘ in our next Department seminar.

📆 Thursday 27 March, 1.00pm – 2.30pm

➡️ buff.ly/RawGEJC
lindseymacmillan.bsky.social
If you want to hear more about our recent @nuffieldfoundation.org funded research on inequalities in access to professional occupations, join us at LSE on Thurs where I will present our work - joint with @clairetyler.bsky.social and Catherine Dilnot
lsesocialpolicy.bsky.social
📣 @lindseymacmillan.bsky.social will explore ‘Inequalities in Applications and Offers to Graduate Recruitment Programmes‘ in our next Department seminar.

📆 Thursday 27 March, 1.00pm – 2.30pm

➡️ buff.ly/RawGEJC

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

lindseymacmillan.bsky.social
Out tomorrow: our @nuffieldfoundation.org report "Inequalities in Access to Professional Occupations" @clairetyler.bsky.social & Catherine Dilnot

Why are working class & ethnic minority young people underrepresented in professional jobs? Do they not apply? OR do they apply, but just not get hired?
tomanbarsbai.com
Keep your papers coming and join us for the Bristol Applied Economics Meeting (BÆM) on Development Economics, May 6-7!

📢 Invited talks by the brilliant @saralowes.bsky.social, Devesh Rustagi & @deanyang.bsky.social

📅 Submission deadline: Feb 28.
Details here👉http://baem.info

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

brenttoderian.bsky.social
Air pollution has dropped significantly in #Paris in the last 15 years. Mayor @annehidalgo.bsky.social’s leadership has traded car space for green space, safe bike space, kid space.. and traded pollution for people.

Good trade.
Change in Paris air quality between 2007 and 2023 using visuals
profsimonb.bsky.social
This is joint work with Eric Taylor (Harvard) and Shenila Rawal (OPERA) and provides RCT evidence on the effectiveness of teacher peer observation.

One key finding is that the pupils of the ^observing^ teachers gain more than the pupils of the ^observed^ pupils.

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

samfr.bsky.social
Also true of Banglasheshi students who now outperform White British students at GCSE despite having significantly lower average incomes.

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

gabrielmilland.bsky.social
British-Pakistanis are upwardly mobile. They go to university at a very high rate. They may be socially quite conservative. Many run small businesses. They're increasingly suspicious of Labour.

But now they know the Tories think it would have been better if they had never come.

Reposted by: Simon Burgess

nuffieldfoundation.org
The latest #NuffieldFunded annual report on education spending in England from @theifs.bsky.social delivers independent analysis of the winners & losers.
Key insights include:
📉 A continued spending squeeze for schools & colleges
📈 Some gains for the under-5s
Read it here:
ow.ly/9qVA50UBKB4
Image of Education Director Josh Hillman and the words - The IFS’s analysis outlines the complex web of factors influencing the government’s decision-making on funding for the early years, school pupils, and further and higher education students.

References

Fields & subjects

Updated 1m