This essay was part of a plenary session at the 2024 ASSA meetings on “Thinking and doing like an inclusive economist” in honor of Bill Spriggs. I reflect on and expand Sprigg's 2020 open letter to economists that was titled, “Is now a teachable moment for economists?”
BayerA.HooverG. A.WashingtonE. (2020). How you can work to increase the presence and improve the experience of Black, Latinx, and Native American people in the economics profession. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 34(3), 193–219. https://doi.org/10.1257/jep.34.3.193
2.
BeckerG. S. (1971). The economics of discrimination. University of Chicago Press.
3.
BernheimD. (2023). Presentation at CSWEP’s solutions/innovative ideas for addressing DEI issues. Allied Social Science Association meetings, New Orleans. January 8
4.
ChettyR. (2014). Improving opportunities for economic mobility in the United States. Testimony for the budget committee, United States senate. Hearing on “opportunity, mobility, and inequality in today’s economy.” April 1
5.
ChettyR. (2016). Improving opportunities for economic mobility: New evidence and policy lessons
6.
KanterR. M. (1977). Men and women of the corporation. Basic Books
7.
KimM. (2020). Intersectionality and gendered racism in the United States: A new theoretical framework. Review of Radical Political Economics, 52(4), 616–625. https://doi.org/10.1177/0486613420926299
8.
KimM. (2022). Gender in economics 50 years ago and today: Feminist economists speak. Review of Radical Political Economics, 55(4), 8–25. https://doi.org/10.1177/04866134221093095
KimM. (Forthcoming). Missing voices, missing perspectives, missing women, missing reality—Gender in economics, chapter 1. In DolarV.Perry’sT. (Eds.), Missing voices in economics. Palgrave Macmillan.
12.
LeonardT. C. (2017). Illiberal reformers. Princeton University Press.
13.
LoganT.MyersS. L.Jr. (2020). The failure of economics and the marginalization of research on race. Chapter 16. In GallianiS.PanizzaU. (Eds.), Publishing and measuring success in Economics (1st ed., Vol. 1, pp. 117–123). Center for Economic Policy Research.