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Mandatory Flour Fortification in Georgia: a Boon or a Burden for the Poor?
23 January 2016

Soon the Georgian Parliament will be discussing a small but important change, which will affect something as significant and vital as bread, along with pasta, khachapuri, and anything made with wheat flour. The Georgian legislators will be considering a law, according to which flour fortification will become mandatory in Georgia.

Economics, Health and Happiness
18 January 2016

On January 14-16, 2016 ISET-PI’s Senior Researcher Nino Doghonadze attended a conference centered on the discussion of, “Economics, Health and Happiness” in Lugano, Switzerland. The conference brought together interdisciplinary researchers from approximately 60 countries.

Men Are Rational, Women Are Adaptive?
18 January 2016

For over three and a half years, the ISET Policy Institute has been tracking the trends in the Georgian consumer sentiments. Every month a team of callers dial randomly generated telephone numbers to interview around 330 people from all over Georgia. The interviewer first asks the basic questions about the respondent’s age, level of education, place of residence, and then follows up with questions about the current financial situation of the household and the person’s expectations about the future economic situation in the country.

Lasha Lanchava visits Stockholm School of Economics
11 December 2015

On December 9-10 Lasha Lanchava from ISET Policy Institute traveled to Stockholm Institute of Transition Economics (SITE) at Stockholm School of Economics to present his recent experimental work done at ISET and to discuss the possibility of cooperation between SITE and ISET.

On Education and the Sacred Duty of Defending One’s Motherland
29 November 2015

Rati, Lasha, and Irakli are first-year engineering students at the Georgian Technical University (GTU). Rather unusual students, one should add. At 22-23, all three are very much alive. Yet, they never attend classes and are not taking exams. BSc in engineering would be their third educational degree, yet neither one of them has any intention of completing his studies at GTU. And one more interesting detail: their ‘studies’ at GTU are paid for by the Georgian taxpayers because engineering (as well as mathematics and natural sciences) is considered to be a priority subject by the Georgian government.

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