Luca Antonio RIcci (@lucaricci2010) 's Twitter Profile
Luca Antonio RIcci

@lucaricci2010

Economist. Division Chief @IMFNews , Research Fellow at @cepr_org , former Head of International Economics at Barclays - Personal account. Views are my own.

ID: 4171078569

calendar_today12-11-2015 12:16:22

556 Tweet

95 Takipçi

316 Takip Edilen

Jaynit (@jaynitx) 's Twitter Profile Photo

In 1995, Charlie Munger gave a 1-hour masterclass on why smart people make dumb decisions. His frameworks: • 24 causes of misjudgment • Persian messenger syndrome • Lollapalooza effects 15 lessons from "Psychology of Human Misjudgment" lecture: 1. Man with a hammer syndrome

Olivier Blanchard (@ojblanchard1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

David having been my student, I am proud to have contributed, as a Frenchman, and admittedly somewhat indirectly, to the improvement of NFL football. (and who says economists are useless?...) NFL: what about free tickets to the superbowl?

Luca Antonio RIcci (@lucaricci2010) 's Twitter Profile Photo

firms may not want replace new entry workers with AI as they need a pipeline of workers and they lose the experienced ones … but it requires firms to be forward-looking…How big a threat is AI to entry-level jobs? (from The Economist) economist.com/business/2026/…

World of Statistics (@stats_feed) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🇮🇹 Italian People Around the World (incl. ancestry, 2026) Italy’s diaspora is one of the largest on Earth — especially across the Americas. Top countries by people of Italian descent: 
🇮🇹 Italy — 53.6M
🇧🇷 Brazil — 32.0M
🇦🇷 Argentina — 28.8M
🇺🇸 United States — 19.2M
🇫🇷

Hanno Lustig (@hannolustig) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Back in the 1960s, Robert Triffin predicted that the Bretton-Woods arrangement would be short-lived. To keep the world supplied with enough dollars, the US would have to keep running balance of payment deficits, ultimately leading investors to question the gold backing of all

Back in the 1960s, Robert Triffin predicted that the Bretton-Woods arrangement would be short-lived. To keep the world supplied with enough dollars, the US would have to keep running balance of payment deficits, ultimately leading investors to question the gold backing of all
themsteri (@teririch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Psychology says the 1960s and 70s accidentally produced one of the most emotionally durable generations in modern history — not through better parenting but through benign neglect that forced children to self-regulate, problem-solve, and develop emotional- share.google/4ucVPZsWcdy4fd…

Math0nymics (@mathonymics) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people with limited knowledge or competence in a specific area greatly overestimate their own abilities. Conversely, highly skilled individuals often underestimate their relative competence, assuming tasks that are easy for

The Dunning-Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people with limited knowledge or competence in a specific area greatly overestimate their own abilities. Conversely, highly skilled individuals often underestimate their relative competence, assuming tasks that are easy for
Luca Antonio RIcci (@lucaricci2010) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This article is touching upon a key point in AI. Layoff is just a matter of time, but we should master the transition to contain unemployment nytimes.com/2026/03/06/opi…

Luca Antonio RIcci (@lucaricci2010) 's Twitter Profile Photo

95,000 scientists less will have massive long term productivity consequences …. : Prominent Climate Scientist Resigns From NASA, Citing Trump’s Attack on Science nytimes.com/2026/03/25/cli… via The New York Times

Aakash Gupta (@aakashg0) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Jeff Bezos just said an AI crash would be the best thing that ever happened to AI. Sounds insane until you look at what happened last time. Telecom companies invested $500 billion into fiber optic cable between 1996 and 2001. Most of it financed with debt. The growth in