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, American economists George Akerlov, Michael Spence and Joseph Stiglitz. They have made outstanding contributions in the field of "analysis of asymmetrical information markets".
, American economists Daniel Kahneman and Vernon Smith. Kahneman successfully combined psychological analysis with the study of economics, laying the foundation for the creation of a new field of economic research. Smith pioneered a series of experimental methods that set the standard for reliable economic research through laboratory experiments.
American economist Robert Engel and British economist Clive Granger. They used two new methods, "Variability over Time" and "Common Trends", to analyze economic time series, which had a huge impact on economic research and economic development.
Norwegian economist Finn Kidlander and American economist Edward Prescott. The research of these two economists focuses on two main aspects: the "time consistency problem" of macroeconomic policy and the influencing factors of the business cycle.
Robert John Orman and Thomas Crompby Schelling advanced the understanding of conflict and cooperation through game theory analysis.
Edmund Phelps, research achievements in the field of macroeconomic intertemporal decision-making.
Leonid Hurwitz, Eric Maskin, and Roger Melson, who laid the foundations for mechanism design theory.
Paul Krugman, completed an analysis of the patterns and regions of economic activity.
Eleanor Ostrom, Oliver Williamson, on their contributions to economic governance, especially to the general population, and the analysis of economic governance, especially in the marginal sector of business.
year, Peter Diamond, Dale Mortensen, Christopher Pissarides, in"Market search theory"has made outstanding contributions.
Thomas Saginyutz and Christopher Sims, An Empirical Study of Causes and Their Effects in Macroeconomics.
Elvin Rose, Lloyd Shapley, created the theory of "stable distribution" and carried out the practice of "market design".
In the year, Les Peter Hansen and Robert Shearer completed an empirical analysis of Shipei's assets.
Jean Tirole, who completed his research and analysis of market forces and regulation.
Angus Deaton, completed his analysis of consumption, poverty, and welfare.
Oliver Hart, Bent Homestrom, Contributions to Contract Theory.
Richard H. Taylor, for his contributions to behavioral economics.
Paul Romer, William Nordhouse, Outstanding contributions to research on innovation, climate, and economic growth.
Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Dufrow, Michael Kramer, Experimental Approaches to Global Poverty Alleviation.
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Three winners of the 2019 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences.
Abhijit Banaji was born in 1961 in Mumbai, India. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1988. He is currently a professor of international economics.
Esther Duflo was born in Paris, France in 1972 and graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States. Co-founder of Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab, he is currently a professor of development economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Michael Kramer, born in 1964, is an American development economist and currently a professor at the Gates of the Development Society at Harvard University.
According to the Nobel Prize selection committee, the research conducted by the 2019 Nobel laureate in economics has greatly improved people's ability to fight global poverty. In just 20 years, their new experiment-based approach has transformed development economics, which is now a thriving field of research.
The 2018 award went to economists William Nordhaus and Paul Romer for their combination of technological innovation and climate change with economic growth.
In 2017.
American economist Richard Taylor was honored for his contributions to behavioral economics. By studying and exploring the consequences of limited rationality, social preferences, and lack of control, Taylor demonstrates how human traits influence individual decisions and thus market outcomes.
Data map: Oliver Hart, an American economist who won the 2016 Nobel Prize in Economics, showed his award at the award ceremony.
In 2016.
Oliver Hart of Harvard University and Bengert Horstrom of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for their contributions to contract theory.
In 2015.
Angus Deaton, an economist with dual British and American citizenship, won the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences that year for his research on consumption, poverty and welfare.
In 2014.
Jean Tirole, a French economist known as a "genius economist" of our time, won the award for his contribution to research in the field of market forces and regulation, breaking the monopoly of economic awards by American economists for many years.
According to statistics, more than 20 of the 81 Nobel Prize winners in economics have ties to China.
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The 2010 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences was awarded for his outstanding contributions to market search theory.
On October 11, 2010, Beijing time, the Royal Swedish Academy announced that American economist Peter ADiamond) and Dale T. MortensenMortensen), British economist Christopher Pisaridis
pissarides) shared the 2010 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in recognition of their outstanding contributions to market search theory.
Peter ABorn in 1940, Diamond graduated from Yale University in 1960 with a bachelor's degree in mathematics. In 1963, at the age of 23, he received his Ph.D. in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, after which he began teaching at the University of California, Berkeley. Diamond has been on the faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 1966.
From 2002 to 2003, Diamond was elected president of the American Economic Association. On the 13th of last month, Obama nominated him as a member of the Federal Reserve Committee. Peter Diamond is known to be the proposer of the generational overlapping model, an expert on social security, pensions and tax issues.
Dale T. MortensenProfessor Mortensen, a graduate of Northwestern University, specializes in labor economics, macroeconomics, and economic theory, with a particular focus on job search and unemployment theory, and extends his research to labor adjustment, research and development, personal relations, and labor redistribution.
Professor Christopher Pissarides is from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). British, Cypriot.
Mullis was born in North Carolina in December 1944.
In 1972, Mullis received his Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of California, Berkeley, where his research focused on how to synthesize proteins and study their structure. After two years as a postdoctoral fellow, Mullis then moved to work at Cetus, a biotechnology company. Mullis worked as a DNA chemist at Cetus for 7 years. >>>More
Now it's just out of the oven. On Tencent.
Mo Yan (February 17, 1955), formerly known as Guan Moye, was born in Gaomi County, Shandong Province, and is a famous contemporary Chinese writer. Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, The Open University of Hong Kong, Adjunct Professor of Qingdao University of Science and Technology. Since the mid-1980s, he has risen to prominence with a series of vernacular works, full of complex emotions of "nostalgia" and "resentment", and is classified as a writer of "root-seeking literature". >>>More
The theory of product organization was promoted.
The theory of industrial organization is one of the most active and fruitful fields of economics in recent years. The theory of industrial organization takes the market and enterprises as the research object, and studies the behavior of enterprises from the perspective of the market or the market structure from the perspective of enterprises. >>>More
Christopher Pissarides, male, born on 20 February 1948 in Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus, is a Greek Cypriot who works at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Due to his outstanding contributions to market search theory and macroeconomics, he is also known as Peter A., a fellow economist with two other economists diamond、 dale t. >>>More