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Mokyr, Aghion and Howitt win Nobel economics prize

The Nobel Economics Prize 2025

  • Official Name: Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.
  • Prize Money: 11 million Swedish Kronor (~$1.2 million).
  • Laureates: Joel Mokyr (Northwestern University, USA), Philippe Aghion (Collège de France, INSEAD, LSE), Peter Howitt (Brown University, USA).
  • Prize Distribution: Mokyr received half; Aghion and Howitt shared the other half.
  • Purpose: Recognizes contributions that advance understanding of economic phenomena, in this case, innovation-driven growth.
  • Announcement Context: The prize highlights the importance of sustained economic growth in a historical context where stagnation was more common.

Relevance

  • GS 3 – Economy & Development:
    • Innovation as a growth driver, role of technology, industrial policy.
  • GS 2 – Governance & Policy Design:
    • Understanding economic incentives, regulation of creative destruction, fostering innovation ecosystems.

Laureates’ Contributions

1.          Joel Mokyr

  • Used historical observations to identify factors that sustain economic growth.
    • Focused on technological innovations as a driver of long-term economic expansion.
    • Emphasized the historical patterns of growth vs. stagnation.

2.          Philippe Aghion & Peter Howitt

  • Developed a mathematical model of creative destruction.
    • Concept: Continuous replacement of old products, technologies, and processes by new, superior innovations.
    • Highlights the dynamic nature of innovation in economic growth.

Key Concepts

Innovation-Driven Growth

  • Economic growth primarily propelled by new technologies and ideas.
    • Sustained growth requires continuous technological progress and adoption.

Creative Destruction

  • Introduced in the context of Schumpeterian economics.
    • Process where new innovations replace obsolete products and processes, fueling productivity gains and economic development.
    • Creates winners (innovators) and losers (obsolete industries), emphasizing the dynamic trade-offs in economies.

Historical Economic Stagnation

  • For most of human history, growth was limited or stagnant.
    • Modern sustained growth is unusual and requires institutional, technological, and social support.

Implications of the Research

  • Understanding growth mechanisms helps policymakers anticipate and counteract threats to economic progress.
  • Innovation-focused policies can boost productivity, employment, and living standards.
  • Models of creative destruction are useful in:
    • Designing industrial policy.
    • Anticipating disruption from new technologies.
    • Balancing support for innovation with social safety nets for displaced sectors.

Historical Context of the Prize

  • Economics Prize established in 1969 (much later than Nobel’s original 1901 prizes).
  • First winners: Ragnar Frisch (Norway) and Jan Tinbergen (Netherlands) for dynamic economic modeling.
  • Past notable laureates: Paul Krugman, Milton Friedman, Ben Bernanke, Daron Acemoglu.
  • 2024 Economics Prize: Simon Johnson, James Robinson, Daron Acemoglu – studied colonial history and public institutions to explain persistent poverty.

Key Takeaways

  • Sustained economic growth is not automatic; it requires innovation, supportive institutions, and adaptive policies.
  • Creative destruction explains how economies evolve dynamically, balancing obsolescence and opportunity.
  • Policymakers must anticipate threats to growth, e.g., stagnation, technological disruption, and market failures.
  • The prize underscores the importance of interdisciplinary approaches: history, economics, and quantitative modeling.
  • Provides guidance for designing policies to foster long-term productivity and economic resilience.

October 2025
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