News

Cambridge Residents Slam Council Proposal to Delay Bike Lane Construction

News

‘Gender-Affirming Slay Fest’: Harvard College QSA Hosts Annual Queer Prom

News

‘Not Being Nerds’: Harvard Students Dance to Tinashe at Yardfest

News

Wrongful Death Trial Against CAMHS Employee Over 2015 Student Suicide To Begin Tuesday

News

Cornel West, Harvard Affiliates Call for University to Divest from ‘Israeli Apartheid’ at Rally

After Error is Revealed, Professor Pair Defends Core Conclusions

By Maddie Sewani, Contributing Writer

After coming under fire last week for a Microsoft Excel error and what have been called unconventional research methods in a prominent 2010 macroeconomics paper, Harvard Kennedy School professor Carmen M. Reinhart and economics and public policy professor Kenneth S. Rogoff are continuing to defend their research, saying that despite one mistake, their core conclusions remain unchanged.

In their study, entitled “Growth in a Time of Debt,” Reinhart and Rogoff found that when the size of a country’s debt exceeds 90 percent of its gross domestic product, economic growth slows dramatically. The paper has been cited extensively by policymakers—including Olli Rehn of the European Commission and U.S. Representative Paul D. Ryan—pushing for major budget cuts in Europe and the United States.

But on April 15, a trio of researchers at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, published a paper that found fault with three aspects of the Harvard researchers’ influential study. The Amherst researchers discovered that Reinhart and Rogoff had made a basic coding error in Excel that undermined their key calculation of average GDP growth in nations with high levels of public debt. The Amherst researchers also took issue with Reinhart and Rogoff’s methodology, which omitted several years of data for some countries in the sample and assigned equal weight to all of the nations analyzed in the study.

In a response published the next day, Reinhart and Rogoff stood behind both their research methodology and their results before acknowledging the Excel error in a second statement a day later.

“We are grateful to Herndon et al. for the careful attention to our...paper and for pointing out an important correction,” they wrote in the second statement. “It is sobering that such an error slipped into one of our papers despite our best efforts to be consistently careful. We do not, however, believe this regrettable slip affects in any significant way the central message of the paper.”

Reinhart and Rogoff wrote that they “object to in the strongest terms” the Amherst researchers’s claim that Reinhart and Rogoff “selectively omitted” data in their sample, saying that they had left out certain years from their data set because data for those periods had not yet been constructed. In response to the charge that Reinhart and Rogoff’s equal weighting of all countries exaggerated their results, the Harvard researchers explained that they had used this method to avoid disproportionately weighting countries that may have experienced specific peculiarities.

Rogoff wrote in an email to The Crimson that he and Reinhart are currently writing a third response to the criticism that they expect to release sometime this week.Princeton professor and Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman has published several articles sharply criticizing Reinhart and Rogoff’s response to the Amherst researchers’ critique. He called their first response “disappointing” and “evasive,” and the second one “disingenuous.”

But Henning Bohn, an economics professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, expressed sympathy for Reinhart and Rogoff, saying “anybody can make a little error.” He credited the two Harvard researchers for their “transparency” throughout the dispute.

When asked about the implications of the Excel error, Bohn explained that the slight changes in the numbers did not faze him.

“This little glitch should not detract from the main message of their research,” he said.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags
Harvard Kennedy SchoolAcademics