Tuesday, April 23, 2024
Kidney Markets--my debate with Debra Satz (video)
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Talks at Washington State University, today and tomorrow
Below is the announcement for a public lecture I'll give today at Washington State University, in Pullman, WA.
Bertha C. and Roy E. Leigh Distinguished Lecture in Economics — School of Economic Sciences
"The School of Economic Sciences invites you to the Leigh Lecture on Thursday, April 11, at 4:30 p.m. in CUE 203 on the Pullman campus. The talk, titled “Economists as Engineers: Matchmaking and Market Design,” will be presented by Dr. Alvin Roth, the Craig and Susan McCaw Professor of Economics at Stanford University." (another announcement here.)
And tomorrow at 3:00 I'll give an Economics department lecture on "Controversial markets and prohibited transactions."
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Public lecture today at the Casa Central de la Universidad de Chile:“Quién obtiene qué y por qué: La nueva economía del diseño de mercados”
Alvin Roth, Premio Nobel de Economía, dictará charla magistral en Casa Central de la Universidad de Chile [Alvin Roth, Nobel Prize winner in Economics, will give a keynote talk at the Central House of the University of Chile]
“Who gets what and why: The new economics of market design” is the name of the talk that Alvin Roth, 2012 Nobel Prize winner in Economics, will give on Wednesday, December 20, at 12:00 p.m., in the Hall of Honor of the Central House of the University of Chile.
The activity is organized by the Millennium Institute for Research on Market Imperfections and Public Policies (MIPP), the Center for Mathematical Modeling (CMM) of the University of Chile and the Ring Project “Information and Computing in Market Design” and in it Roth will speak about his renowned book in which he explains about the frequent “matching” markets, in which money is not a determining factor.
The talk will be in English and will have simultaneous translation into Spanish. [La charla será en inglés y contará con traducción simultánea al español.]
The talk will be in the Salón de Honor de Casa Central, which sounds like it will be an impressive venue.
Friday, November 10, 2023
Kidney Exchange: Within and Across Borders (video lecture).
Below is a video of my 40 minute talk at Berkeley on Monday, on Kidney Exchange: Within and Across Borders, at the final workshop on Mathematics and Computer Science of Market and Mechanism Design, at the Simons Laufer Mathematical Sciences Institute (SLMath). (But we warned or reassured, this isn't a mathematical lecture...)
Monday, October 30, 2023
Simple Proofs of Important Results in Market Design-- (video of my talk at Berkeley's Simons Institute)
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
Kidney exchange, around the world and in Germany? German Health Economics Association (DGGÖ) webinar tomorrow
Wednesday, May 10, 2023
New Directions in Market Design, NBER conference May 11-12, 2023 in Washington DC (and on YouTube)
I'm on my way to this conference, celebrating a quarter of a century of practical market design by economists.
New Directions in Market Design, NBER conference May 11-12, 2023 (US Eastern Time)
LOCATION Convene, 600 14th St NW in Washington, DC. and livestreamed on YouTube
ORGANIZERS Irene Y. Lo, Michael Ostrovsky, and Parag A. Pathak
NBER conferences are by invitation. All participants are expected to comply with the NBER's Conference Code of Conduct.
Supported by Schmidt Futures
Thursday, May 11
8:30 am Continental Breakfast
9:00 am Opening Talk: Alvin Roth, Stanford University and NBER ("Market Design and Maintenance")
9:30 am Break
9:45 am Electricity and Renewable Energy Market Design
Overview: Mar Reguant, Northwestern University and NBER
Viewpoint 1: Martin Bichler, Technical University of Munich
Viewpoint 2: Richard O’Neill, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
11:05 am Market Design for the Environment
Overview: Estelle Cantillon, ULB
Viewpoint 1: Rachel Glennerster, University of Chicago and NBER
Viewpoint 2: Nathan Keohane, Environmental Defense Fund
12:25 pm Lunch discussions
2:00 pm Market Design in Healthcare
Overview: Benjamin Handel, University of California at Berkeley and NBER
Viewpoint 1: Mark Miller, Arnold Ventures
Viewpoint 2: Fanyin Zheng, Columbia University
3:20 pm Market Design for Organ Transplantation
Overview: Tayfun Sonmez, Boston College
Viewpoint 1: Nikhil Agarwal, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and NBER
Viewpoint 2: Jennifer Erickson, Organize
4:40 pm Break
5:00 pm Market Design for Education
Overview: Parag Pathak, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and NBER
Viewpoint 1: Derek Neal, University of Chicago and NBER
Viewpoint 2: Irene Lo, Stanford University
6:20 pm Adjourn
6:45 pm Group Dinner - JW Marriott
Friday, May 12
8:00 am Continental Breakfast
8:30 am Market Design for Public Housing
Overview: Nathan Hendren, Harvard University and NBER
Viewpoint 1: Winnie van Dijk, Harvard University and NBER
Viewpoint 2: Mary Cunningham, Urban Institute
9:50 am Market Design in Transportation
Overview: Michael Ostrovsky, Stanford University and NBER
Viewpoint 1: David Shmoys, Cornell University
Viewpoint 2: Wai Yan Leong, Singapore Land Transport Authority
11:10 am Break
11:30 am Market Design in Financial Markets
Overview: Haoxiang Zhu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and NBER
Viewpoint 1: Eric Budish, University of Chicago and NBER
Viewpoint 2: Scott Mixon, CFTC
12:50 pm
Lunch discussions
2:20 pm Market Design Tools in the Regulation of Online Marketplaces
Overview: Susan Athey, Stanford University and NBER
Viewpoint 1: Preston McAfee, Google
Viewpoint 2: Michael Schwarz, Microsoft
3:40 pm Artificial Intelligence and Market Design
Overview: Kevin Leyton-Brown, University of British Columbia
Viewpoint 1: Hal Varian, Google
Viewpoint 2: Nikhil Devanur, Amazon
5:00 pm Break
5:20 pm Closing Talk: Paul Milgrom, Stanford University
5:50 pm Adjourn
6:30 pm Group Dinner - JW Marriott
Wednesday, March 22, 2023
IgNobel Prize celebration today: laugh and think
I'll be joining an IgNoble event this afternoon at Stanford, everyone is invited.
Health Data Science Center, Wednesday, March 22, 2023, 1:00pm - 3:00pm PDT
Stanford University Rotunda E241 (Chem-H + Wu Tsai Building)
This event is open to the general public
"Our esteemed founder of the prize (and the journal the Annals of Improbable Research), Marc Abrahams, will take us through the fascinating history of the Ig Nobel Prize, from its inception in 1991 to the present day. We will learn about the inspiration behind the award, the selection process, and his most unforgettable moments along the way.
"We will be joined by Professor Alvin Roth (Nobel Economics Prize 2012) who will share his insights in research and active blogging, as well as Dr. Genie Scott (Public Welfare Medal 2010) on her journey with Ig Nobel and improbable research.
"We will hear from some of the brightest minds in research today as our panelists engage in discussions about the significance of improbable research. Our panelists include Alvin Roth (Economics) and Genie C. Scott (Anthropology), past (Ig) Nobel Prize laureates who have made groundbreaking discoveries in fields such as physics, medicine, economics, public policies, and more.
"Audience members will also have the opportunity to ask questions and engage in the conversation with our panelists, as well as sign up for a meet-and-greet with Marc after the event.
"Join us for an unforgettable afternoon of laughs, learning, and thought-provoking discussions at the Ig Nobel Prize face-to-face Event!"
Tuesday, March 7, 2023
Provocative lecture on repugnant transactions at San Jose State University tomorrow
My ambition is always to give a provocative lecture, and tomorrow evening I'll be officially doing so, when I deliver the David S. Saurman Provocative Lecture, on repugnant markets at SJSU.
Tuesday, November 15, 2022
Eric Budish on the economics of cryptocurrencies (video of his Harris Lecture at Harvard)
If you haven't heard Eric Budish talk about crypto, this is your chance: here's the video of his Harris Lecture at Harvard: The Economics of Cryptocurrencies by Eric Budish
(It was delivered before the recent collapse of the FTX exchange.)
Tuesday, October 18, 2022
My Morse Lecture at INFORMS 2022, tomorrow
Tomorrow, Wednesday October19, from 8-9am Eastern time, I'll be giving the Morse Lecture at the INFORMS 2022 annual meeting in Indianapolis
Market Design: The Dialog Between Simple Abstract Models and Practical Implementation
I’ll review some of the elegantly simple models that underlie the initial designs for matching processes like the medical residency Match, school choice and kidney exchange, and the modifications, complications and computations that were needed to get new designs adopted, implemented and maintained over the years.
You can read about the occasion of this lecture, my Philip McCord Morse Lectureship Award here.
Saturday, October 15, 2022
Kidney exchange in The Times of India
The Times of India covers my talk at the Indian Society of Transplantation meeting:
Alvin Roth for legal boost to kidney exchange pool in India by Chaitanya Deshpande, Oct 15, 2022c
The site makes it hard to extract text, but here's a photo of some comments, which make me hope that some action may be taken:
Thursday, October 13, 2022
The Dr H.L. Trivedi Oration at the Indian Society of Transplantation (ISOT) Meeting 2022
Here's the meeting announcement:
ISOT 2022 NAGPUR
32nd Annual Conference of The Indian Society of Organ Transplantation
2nd Mid-term Meeting of Liver Transplantation Society of India
15th Annual International Conference of NATCO
Dates : 12th - 16th October 2022 | Venue : Hotel Le Meridien, Nagpur
My talk, the Dr H.L. Trivedi Oration is scheduled for 11:00am on Friday the 14th in Nagpur, which means I'll be giving it by zoom tonight, Thursday evening at 10:30 pm Pacific Time.
The presentation, which will be about "Increasing the availability of transplants in India" is in honor of the late Dr. Hargovind Laxmishanker "H. L." Trivedi (August 1932 – October 2019), who I had the privilege of meeting,
- India has enormous talent and accomplishment in living-donor transplantation
- To more nearly reach it’s potential, India needs to invest in recovering deceased donor organs.
- In the near term, it can build on it’s accomplishments in kidney transplantation, by
- establishing national (not just regional) kidney exchange
- Continuing to explore international exchange for the hardest to match pairs
- Reducing restrictions on who can be an exchange donor
- Allowing non-directed donors and chains
- Allowing some chains to begin with a deceased-donor kidney
- Reducing financial barriers by increased investment in public hospitals and government health insurance, for organ donors as well as recipients
Sunday, October 9, 2022
Public Lecture at Iowa State (video): "Who Gets What and Why? Economists as Engineers."
Iowa State University in Ames Iowa has made available a video of a public lecture I gave there on September 22, called "Who Gets What and Why? Economists as Engineers."
Wednesday, September 21, 2022
Economists as Engineers: Public lecture at Iowa State University tomorrow
I'll be travelling today to Ames Iowa, to give a public lecture tomorrow evening at Iowa State University (and to attend a market design conference there on Friday and Saturday)
Monday, September 12, 2022
Access to transplantation around the world, at the International Congress of The Transplantation Society (TTS 2022) in Buenos Aires
I'm attending the 29th International Congress of The Transplantation Society (TTS 2022) | Buenos Aires - Argentina, and will speak in the first plenary session, on Access and Transparency in transplantation around the world. I'll be the third of three speakers:
Monday, September 12, 2022 – 09:40 to 11:10
Saturday, December 4, 2021
Morse lecture at INFORMS next year: market design and the study of operations
In 1974, the year I received my Ph.D. from Stanford's (then) Department of Operations Research, it was unclear in what discipline game theory would best thrive. As disciplinary boundaries shifted, I found that I was an economist. But I've kept open my professional ties to OR, and indeed I think of market design as the engineering part of game theory, and very concerned with the operational detail of markets and marketplaces. So I was glad to accept an offer to compose a lecture on this for an OR audience, since market design is now a multi-disciplinary field that draws many students of operations.
Here's an announcement that includes the following:
Philip McCord Morse Lectureship Award
The Lectureship is awarded in honor of Philip McCord Morse in recognition of his pioneer contribution to the field of operations research and the management sciences. The award is given in odd-numbered years at the Annual Meeting if there is a suitable recipient. The term of the lectureship is two years. The award is $2,000, a certificate, a travel fund of $5,000, a copy of Morse's autobiography, In at the Beginnings: A Physicist's Life, and a copy of Morse and Kimball's Methods of Operations Research. Learn more about the Philip McCord Morse Lectureship Award and how to be nominated on the INFORMS website.
This year, the lectureship is awarded to:
Alvin E. Roth, Stanford University
Who exemplifies the true spirit of Professor Morse and who, like Morse, has been an outstanding spokesperson for the operations research profession in operations research tools and ideas in designing efficient markets for a range of applications. This award is given by the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences in honor of Philip McCord Morse, in recognition of Professor Morse's pioneering contributions to the field of operations research and of his devoted service to the field's professional societies.
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See also
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Wednesday, November 24, 2021
Mail order catalogs, downtown department stores, suburban malls, and modern home delivery
Here's a 10 minute video in which I discuss how retail markets have changed over the last century and more, with the invention of mail order catalogs, and the growth of downtown department stores (in part as a result of urban public transportation), and then suburban shopping malls, before our current age of digital commerce and home delivery.
This was my discussion of talks by Rob Townsend and David Autor at the October zoom conference
Tuesday, September 14, 2021
Market design (I talk to the entering Ph.D. class at Escola Nacional de Administração Pública)
Yesterday I gave what I think was the first lecture to the entering class of Ph.D. students at the Escola Nacional de Administração Pública (ENAP) in Brasilia. I spoke about market design, using as my main examples school choice and kidney exchange. Afterwards there was Q&A on a variety of subjects, including black markets and repugnance.
Here's a video (I start to speak around minute 8):
Monday, April 19, 2021
Controversial Markets: Public lecture at the Zurich Center for Market Design (video)
A video of my April 13 lecture on Controversial Markets is now available at the Zurich Center for Market Design. (The talk proper is about an hour, and then includes some Q&A about compensation for donors, among other things, starting at around minute 56.)
Here's a direct link: