Economics of climate change win Nobel
Prize for U.S. duo
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[October 08, 2018]
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Americans
William Nordhaus and Paul Romer, pioneers in adapting economic theory to
take better account of environmental issues and technological progress,
shared the 2018 Nobel Economics Prize on Monday.
In an award that turned the spotlight on the global debate over risks
associated with climate change, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
said the laureates' work helped answer fundamental questions on how to
promote long-term sustainable growth and enhance human welfare.
The prize took Romer, of New York University's Stern School of Business,
by surprise.
"I got two phone calls this morning, and I didn't answer either one
because I thought it was some spam call, so I wasn't expecting the
prize," he said, while welcoming the chance to expand on his theory.
"I think ... many people think that protecting he environment will be so
costly and so hard that they just want to ignore (this)...," he told a
news conference via phone link.
"(But) we can absolutely make substantial progress protecting the
environment and do it without giving up the chance to sustain growth."
Romer, of New York University's Stern School of Business, had shown how
economic forces govern the willingness of firms to produce new ideas and
innovations, laying the foundations for a new model for development,
known as endogenous growth theory.
Nordhaus, of Yale University, was the first person to create a
quantitative model that described the interplay between the economy and
the climate.
"Their findings have significantly broadened the scope of economic
analysis by constructing models that explain how the market economy
interacts with nature and knowledge," the academy said in statement.
Hours before the award, the United Nations panel on climate changed
warned of the risks of more frequent heat waves, floods and drought in
some regions as well as the loss of species without a radical rethink in
how societies operate.
Monday's award of the last of the 2018 Nobels also took place less than
a month after the 10th anniversary of the collapse of investment bank
Lehman Brothers.
That triggered an economic crisis from which the world's financial
system is arguably still recovering.
STILL IN CRISIS MODE?
Worth 9 million Swedish crowns ($1 million), the economics prize was
established in 1968. It was not part of the original group of five
awards set out in Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel's 1895 will.
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International Monetary Fund (IMF) Managing Director Christine
Lagarde (R) is applauded by panelists (from L), Yale University
Director for the Study of Globalization Ernesto Zedillo and New York
University Economics Professor Paul Romer as she takes the stage to
give opening remarks before a session addressing inclusive growth
during the IMF-World Bank annual meetings in Washington October 8,
2014. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
"This year's Laureates do not deliver conclusive answers, but their
findings have brought us considerably closer to answering the
question of how we can achieve sustained and sustainable global
economic growth," the Academy said.
Romer's career has also taken him outside the academic world. While
on leave from the Stern School, he served as chief economist and
senior vice president at the World Bank until early this year.
Nordhaus, whose research has included economic history, is also
known to have authored a study that before the U.S.-led invasion of
Iraq predicted that costs for a war would reach as high as $2
trillion.
Ten years after the financial crisis erupted, interest rates remain
at or close to record lows in many major economies including Sweden,
where they have languished below zero since early 2015.
The Nobel prizes for physiology or medicine, physics, chemistry and
peace were awarded last week.
Proceedings have been overshadowed by the absence of the literature
prize, postponed to give the Swedish Academy time to restore public
trust after a sexual assault scandal.
(Reporting by Simon Johnson, Niklas Pollard; Additional reporting by
Daniel Dickson, Helena Soderpalm and Anna Ringstrom in Stockholm;
editing by John Stonestreet)
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