Monday, October 13, 2008
economist had predicted meltdown, gets NOBEL
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Amid meltdown, Nobel economics prize no easy pick
Monday, October 13, 2008
The Associated Press
STOCKHOLM, Sweden — If history is any guide, this year's Nobel economics prize will award the developers of economic theories that have had the time to prove resilient.
The past also indicates that today's winner will probably be an American man who will have done the bulk of his work several decades ago, not someone who has analyzed issues related to the financial meltdown that is now throwing capitalism into turmoil worldwide. Also, no woman has ever won the economics prize from the Nobel Foundation since it was first handed out in 1969.
The award, known as the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, is the last of the six Nobel Prizes announced this year and is not one of the original Nobels. It was created in 1968 by the Swedish central bank in Nobel's memory.
Last year, Americans Leonid Hurwicz, Eric S. Maskin and Roger B. Myerson shared the award for developing a theory that explained how buyers and sellers could maximize gains from a transaction. The work on that theory began in 1960.
And Americans have had a virtual stranglehold on the award. The last non-American to win it was Canada's Robert A. Mundell in 1999.
So far, speculation has centered on Eugene Fama, an economist at the University of Chicago, for the efficient-market hypothesis he created in the 1960s. Fama argues market-set asset prices accurately reflect all of the available information that investors need to see.
Hubert Fromlet, a professor of international economics at the University of Jonkoping, predicted that a macroeconomist would win the prize.
He also cited candidates such as Harvard professor Robert Barro, Stanford's Paul Romer, Christopher Sims of Princeton and Thomas Sargent of New York University.
Should the jury step out of line with previous decisions, "Frenchman Jean Tirole for example, should already today be a very hot Nobel Prize candidate, despite his young age," Fromlet said of the 55-year-old scientific director of the Toulouse-based Institut d'economie Industrielle.
His research has focused on industrial organization, game theory, finance and banking as well the psychology of economics.
Others who have figured in the speculation leading to Monday's announcement include Kenneth French, an American economist at Dartmouth, known for his own asset pricing research done with Fama.
American Lars Peter Hansen has been tipped, too, for his role as the developer of generalized method of moments — a statistical method for obtaining estimates of parameters of statistical models.
Fromlet said another contender is Jagdish Bhagwati, a noted proponent of free trade and critic of opponents of globalization from Columbia University.
Other potential candidates whose names have been bandied about include arbitrage pricing researcher Stephen Ross and Assar Lindbeck in Sweden who has researched China's reforming economy.
more
Amid meltdown, Nobel economics prize no easy pick
Monday, October 13, 2008
The Associated Press
STOCKHOLM, Sweden — If history is any guide, this year's Nobel economics prize will award the developers of economic theories that have had the time to prove resilient.
The past also indicates that today's winner will probably be an American man who will have done the bulk of his work several decades ago, not someone who has analyzed issues related to the financial meltdown that is now throwing capitalism into turmoil worldwide. Also, no woman has ever won the economics prize from the Nobel Foundation since it was first handed out in 1969.
The award, known as the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, is the last of the six Nobel Prizes announced this year and is not one of the original Nobels. It was created in 1968 by the Swedish central bank in Nobel's memory.
Last year, Americans Leonid Hurwicz, Eric S. Maskin and Roger B. Myerson shared the award for developing a theory that explained how buyers and sellers could maximize gains from a transaction. The work on that theory began in 1960.
And Americans have had a virtual stranglehold on the award. The last non-American to win it was Canada's Robert A. Mundell in 1999.
So far, speculation has centered on Eugene Fama, an economist at the University of Chicago, for the efficient-market hypothesis he created in the 1960s. Fama argues market-set asset prices accurately reflect all of the available information that investors need to see.
Hubert Fromlet, a professor of international economics at the University of Jonkoping, predicted that a macroeconomist would win the prize.
He also cited candidates such as Harvard professor Robert Barro, Stanford's Paul Romer, Christopher Sims of Princeton and Thomas Sargent of New York University.
Should the jury step out of line with previous decisions, "Frenchman Jean Tirole for example, should already today be a very hot Nobel Prize candidate, despite his young age," Fromlet said of the 55-year-old scientific director of the Toulouse-based Institut d'economie Industrielle.
His research has focused on industrial organization, game theory, finance and banking as well the psychology of economics.
Others who have figured in the speculation leading to Monday's announcement include Kenneth French, an American economist at Dartmouth, known for his own asset pricing research done with Fama.
American Lars Peter Hansen has been tipped, too, for his role as the developer of generalized method of moments — a statistical method for obtaining estimates of parameters of statistical models.
Fromlet said another contender is Jagdish Bhagwati, a noted proponent of free trade and critic of opponents of globalization from Columbia University.
Other potential candidates whose names have been bandied about include arbitrage pricing researcher Stephen Ross and Assar Lindbeck in Sweden who has researched China's reforming economy.
more
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