Talk:2020 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences

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Possible Nominees[edit]

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Possible nominees[edit]

Among the strongest contenders for the 2020 Economics Prize were the following economists and economic researchers, including Paul Milgrom and Robert B. Wilson who were eventually awarded:

Unofficial candidates for the 2021 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
Nominee Country Motivation Institute(s)
Claudia Goldin
(b. 1946)
 United States "for her contribution to labour economicsm especially her analysis of women and gender pay gap."[1][2] Harvard University
Anne O. Krueger
(b. 1934)
 United States "for her fundamental contribution to macroeconomics and the development of 'rent-seeking' in trade policy."[2] Johns Hopkins University
Stanford University
Paul Milgrom
(b. 1948)
 United States "for their development of the auction theory in practical economics."[3][2] Stanford University
Robert B. Wilson
(b. 1937)
 United States Stanford University
Joshua Angrist
(b. 1960)
 United States "for their empirical research on policy evaluation in labour and education."[2][3] Massachusetts Institute of Technology
David Card
(b. 1959)
 United States University of California, Berkeley
Nicholas Bloom
(b. 1973)
 United Kingdom "for his research on the relationship between corporate productivity and management."[3] Stanford University
Raj Chetty
(b. 1979)
 India
 United States
"for his pioneering work on new data construction for public policy."[3] Harvard University
David Schmeidler
(b. 1939–2022)
 Israel "for his research on the ambiguity of belief in decision-making."[3] Tel Aviv University
Ohio State University
Elhanan Helpman
(b. 1946)
 Israel "for co-developing the 'new trade theory' and 'new growth theory', which emphasize the roles of economies of scale and imperfect competition."[2] Tel Aviv University
Harvard University
David Dickey
(b. 1945)
 United States "for their statistical tests of a unit root in time-series analysis."[1] North Carolina State University
Wayne Fuller
(b. 1931)
 United States Iowa State University
Pierre Peron
(b. 1959)
 Canada "for his statistical analysis of non-stationary time series."[1] Boston University
Nobuhiro Kiyotaki
(b. 1955)
 Japan "for developing a novel understanding on business cycle fluctuations with the 'credit-cycles' model."[3] Princeton University
John Moore
(b. 1954)
 United Kingdom University of Edinburgh
London School of Economics
Ben Bernanke
(b. 1953)
 United States "for his research on the dominant monetarist theory and financial crises of the Great Depression."[3] Princeton University
New York University
James Levinsohn
(b. 1958)
 United States "for their BLP random coefficients logit model for demand estimation."[1] Yale University
Steven T. Berry
(b. 1959)
 United States Yale University
Ariél Pakes
(b. 1949)
 United States Harvard University
Gene Grossman
(b. 1955)
 United States "for his research on the relationship between economic growth and trade and the political economy of trade policy."[2] Princeton University

JB Hoang Tam (talk) 08:39, 14 October 2022 (UTC) [reply]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Clarivate Reveals 2020 Citation Laureates - Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". Clarivate. 11 October 2020. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Who will win the 2020 Nobel Prize in Economics?". The Local. 12 October 2020. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Nobel Prize in Economics Prediction: "Empirical Research" or "Theory"". Medium. 11 October 2020. Retrieved 20 August 2022.