| US
trio wins Nobel Economics Prize
STOCKHOLM, (AFP) - US trio Leonid Hurwicz,
Eric Maskin and Roger Myerson won the 2007 Nobel Economics Prize
on Monday for their pioneering work on how to design solutions for
complex economic and social tasks.
The Nobel jury said the three took the prize in light of their work
on Mechanism Design theory, a sub-field of economics, which aims
to ensure the most efficient use of resources in search of desired
ends.
The theory, initiated by Hurwicz and further developed by Maskin
and Myerson has helped economists identify efficient trading
mechanisms, regulation schemes and voting procedures, the
jury said.
The theory, for example, can help identify which mechanisms will
realise the largest gains from trade, maximize a sellers expected
gain or provide an insurance scheme which provides the best coverage
without inviting misuse.
Hurwicz, born in Moscow, is Regents Professor of Economics
Emeritus at the University of Minnesota and in 1990 won the US National
Medal of Science in Behavioural and Social Science for his pioneering
work in mechanism design
Maskin is professor of Social Science at Princeton University and
Myerson professor of Economics at Chicago University.
Last year, the economics prize went to Edmund Phelps of the United
States for his work on how overall economic policy affected welfare
for present and future generations.
This years laureates will receive a gold medal, a diploma
and 10 million Swedish kronor (1.53 million dollars, 1.08 million
euros), to be shared between them.
The formal prize ceremony will be held in Stockholm as tradition
dictates on December 10, the anniversary of the death in 1896 of
the prizes creator, Swedish industrialist and inventor of
dynamite Alfred Nobel.
The Nobel prizes were first awarded in 1901 after Nobel bequeathed
his fortune to the creation of the prizes in his 1895 will.
The economics prize is the only one not originally mentioned in
the will being created by the Swedish Central Bank to mark its tercentenary
in 1968. It was first awarded in 1969 and is also funded by the
bank.
The economics prize wraps up this years Nobels after medicine,
physics, chemistry, literature and peace.
Last week the peace prize went to former US vice president Al Gore
and the UNs top climate panel for their efforts to combat
global warming.
British writer Doris Lessing won the literature prize for five decades
of epic novels that have covered feminism and politics.
The physics prize went to Peter Gruenberg of Germany and Albert
Fert of France for a discovery that led to the miniaturised hard
disk, an essential component in modern-day computers.
Gerhard Ertl of Germany took the chemistry prize while medicine
went to Mario Capecchi and Oliver Smithies of the United States
and Martin Evans of Britain for their work on creating genetically
manipulated mice that replicate human diseases.
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