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Notmy Realname's avatar

> I am inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt simply because it’s more plausible that this is a brain fart; if he wanted to commit intentional fraud, he would be INSANE to make his fraud so easily verifiable. No rational economics professor is going to risk his career by submitting a paper to the JPE knowing that 3/4 of data is duplicates, since he would rationally expect it to be caught immediately by the JPE

>since he would rationally expect it to be caught immediately by the JPE

Should he though? He's affiliated with UChicago and very well may have had some idea that code/data would not actually be checked. Further, you don't need to be a tenured economist to know that in cases like this it's in the best interests of both the journal and the author to simply ignore all calls for retraction and do nothing. It would be very embarrassing for all involved and as you correctly note this way nothing happens to anybody.

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Eric Rasmusen's avatar

One reason not to have a retraction is that it's good to give the replication study authors a publication in return for their good work, and it's hard to do that if you retract the original publication. Also, the original study isn't exactly wrong, it sounds like-- it just has 1/4 of the data, so results become statistically insignificant.

It would be nice if the post said what the original paper's conclusions were, and which, if any, survive the fix-up.

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