Talk:2021 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
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Possible Nominees
[edit]The following section was deleted from the article's page:
Possible nominees
[edit]Among the strongest contenders for the 2021 Economics Prize were the following economists and economic researchers, including Joshua Angrist and David Card who eventually won the prize. Guido Imbens was never mentioned as a frontrow contender for this year.
Nominee | Country | Motivation | Institute(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Anne O. Krueger (b. 1934) |
United States | "for her fundamental contribution to macroeconomics and the development of 'rent-seeking' in trade policy."[1] | Johns Hopkins University Stanford University |
Claudia Goldin (b. 1946) |
United States | "for her contribution to labour economics, especially her analysis of women and gender pay gap."[1] | Harvard University |
Janet Currie (b. ?) |
Canada | "for her innovative research on welfare economics with special attention on family and children."[1] | Princeton School of Public and International Affairs |
Marianne Bertrand (b. 1970) |
Belgium | "for her contribution to labour economics and the understanding of discrimination and gender gaps."[1][2] | University of Chicago |
Susan Athey (b. 1970) |
United States | "for her work on applied auction research and economic theory."[1][2] | Stanford University Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Carmen Reinhart (b. 1955) |
Cuba | "for their contribution to international macroeconomics and insights on global debts and financial crises."[3][2] | Harvard Kennedy School |
Kenneth Rogoff (b. 1953) |
United States | Harvard University | |
Roger Garrison (b. 1944) |
United States | "for his pioneering work on capital-based macroeconomics."[1] | Auburn University Ludwig von Mises Institute |
Joel Mokyr (b. 1946) |
Israel | "for studies of the history and culture of technological progress and its economic consequences."[3] | Northwestern University |
Nobuhiro Kiyotaki (b. 1955) |
Japan | "for developing a novel understanding on business cycle fluctuations with the 'credit-cycles' model."[1] | Princeton University |
John Moore (b. 1954) |
United Kingdom | University of Edinburgh London School of Economics | |
Douglas Diamond (b. ?) |
United States | "for studies on financial intermediaries, crises and market liquidity."[1] | Booth School of Business |
Joshua Angrist (b. 1960) |
United States | "for his research on the effects of public policies and changes in economic or social circumstances."[1] | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
David Card (b. 1959) |
United States | "for his contribution to labour economics and Krueger's research on the effect of minimum wage."[1][2] | University of California, Berkeley |
Olivier Blanchard (b. 1948) |
France | "for his leading research on monetary policy, labor market and employment to macroeconomics."[1] | Peterson Institute for International Economics Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Thomas Piketty (b. 1971) |
France | "for his pioneering contribution to public economics, especially on wealth and income inequality."[1] | Paris School of Economics School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences |
Julia Cagé-Pikkety (b. 1983) |
France | "for her pioneering research on the effects of media and its development on global economy."[1] | Paris Institute of Political Studies |
Daron Acemoglu (b. 1967) |
Turkey | "for his pioneering work in human capital accumulation and the effect of technological change."[2] | Massachusetts Institute of Technology National Bureau of Economic Research |
Philippe Aghion (b. 1956) |
France | "for his innovative work on his theory of endogenous growth and innovation."[2] | College de France London School of Economics |
Alan Blinder (b. 1945) |
United States | "for their research on the great depression, monetary economics, and the international monetary and financial system."[2] | Princeton University |
Barry Eichengreen (b. 1952) |
United States | University of California, Berkeley | |
David Teece (b. 1948) |
New Zealand | "for their pioneering research on entrepreneurship, innovation and competition."[3] | University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business |
David B. Audretsch (b. 1954) |
United States | Indiana University |
JB Hoang Tam (talk) 08:40, 14 October 2022 (UTC)
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Economics Prize wraps up unpredictable Nobel season". France24. 11 October 2021. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g Minh Trinh (4 October 2021). "2021 Economics Nobel Prize Predictions". LinkedIn Corporation. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
- ^ a b c "Clarivate Unveils Citation Laureates 2021 - Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". Clarivate. 22 September 2021. Retrieved 20 August 2022.