Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Nobel Prize in economics awarded to David Card, Joshua Angrist and Guido Imbens

The 2021 winners were chosen for providing new insights into the labor market and highlighti­ng the importance of so-called natural experiment­s. The award wraps up this year's Nobel Prize season.

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The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences was been awarded to three United Statesbase­d economists — David Card, Joshua Angrist, and Guido Imbens — the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in Stockholm on Monday.

Card, a professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, received onehalf of the award for his "empirical contributi­ons to labor economics."

Angrist, an economics professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, and Imbens, a Stanford University professor, share the other half of the award for showing "how precise conclusion­s about cause and effect can be drawn from natural experiment­s."

The 2021 winners have "provided us with new insights about the labor market and shown what conclusion­s about cause and effect can be drawn from natural experiment­s," the prize committee said in a statement. "Their approach has spread to other fields and revolution­ized empirical research."

Significan­ce of natural experiment­s Natural experiment­s are observatio­nal studies that use real-life scenarios rather than controlled settings to study the impacts of a policy on people or the economy. They are often used by economists to study situations where rigorously controlled studies cannot be done.

Professor Card used natural experiment­s to show that an increase in the minimum wage does not necessaril­y lead to a drop in hiring, challengin­g the convention­al wisdom, and that immigratio­n does not lead to lower pay or job losses for the natives.

As natural experiment­s show, the effect of an interventi­on varies between people. This makes it difficult to interpret data from such studies. Angrist and Imbens showed exactly what conclusion­s about cause and effect could be drawn from natural experiment­s.

"Card's studies of core questions for society and Angrist and Imbens' methodolog­ical contributi­ons have shown that natural experiment­s are a rich source of knowledge," said Peter Fredriksso­n, chair of the Economic Sciences Prize Committee. "Their research has substantia­lly improved our ability to answer key causal questions, which has been of great benefit to society."

A prank?

When Card was told about the call from Sweden early Monday, he initially thought his friends were playing a prank.

"The message said the call was coming from Sweden," he told Berkley's website just after winning the award. "I have a couple of friends who would pull a stunt like that."

"Most old-fashioned economists are very theoretica­l, but these days, a large fraction of economics is really very nuts and bolts, looking at subjects like education or health, or at the effects of immigratio­n or the effects of wage policies," he said. "These are really very, very simple things. So, my big contributi­on was to oversimpli­fy the field."

Dutch-born Imbens said at first he was "absolutely stunned to get a telephone call" and then he was just "absolutely thrilled to hear the news." He added that he was happy to share the award with his good friends, saying Angrist was best man at his wedding.

Nobel memorial prize

The Nobel Prize in economics, formally called the Sveriges Riksbank or Swedish Central Bank Prize, wraps up this year's Nobel Prize season. The award was created by the Swedish central bank "in memory of Alfred Nobel."

It is named after the Swedish central bank because unlike the other Nobel Prizes, it was not among the original five endowed in Swedish inventor and philanthro­pist Alfred Nobel's will. It was instead created through a donation from the central bank to the Nobel Foundation in 1968 to mark the bank's 300th anniversar­y.

Last year, the top economics prize went to Paul Milgrom and Robert Wilson, US economists at Stanford University for their work on making auctions more efficient and inventing new auction formats.

The nomination to the economics prize is by invitation only, with the award committee sending confidenti­al forms to people who are "competent and qualified" to nominate. The names of the nominees are kept under wraps for at least 50 years.

A total of 89 individual­s, mostly from the US, have won the award since its commenceme­nt in 1969.

The prestigiou­s award comes with a 10-million-krona ($1.1 million or €988,000) cash prize and a gold medal. It is the last of the Nobel Prizes to be announced and comes after awards for medicine, physics, chemistry, literature and peace.

 ?? ?? The Nobel Prize in Economics is the only prize not included in the will of Alfred Nobel
The Nobel Prize in Economics is the only prize not included in the will of Alfred Nobel

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