Business Standard

Nordhaus, Romer win economics Nobel for climate, innovation

- BINYAMIN APPELBAUM

The 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science was awarded on Monday to a pair of American economists, William D No rd hausa nd Paul MRomer, fortheirwo­rk highlighti­ng the importance of government policy in fostering sustainabl­e economicgr­owth.

No rd ha us was honour ed for pioneering the assessment of the economic impact of climate change, including his advocacy of government­s taxing carbon emissions. Romerwas honour ed for his work on the role of policy in encouragin­g technologi­cal innovation. Nordhaus, 77, isaprofess­orat Yale. Romer, 62, isaprofess­or at New York University.

The award came on the same day that a United Nations panel on climate theannounc­ement. “Humans are capable of amazing accomplish­ments if we set our minds to it .”

Nordhaus, 77, graduated from Yale and then earned a doctor ate in economics from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology­in1967. Thatyear, he returned to Yale as a member of the economics faculty, and he has remained thereevers­ince.

In the 1960s and the 1970s, amid rising concern about pollution, economists began to argue that taxation was the most effective solution: The government should charge people for polluting. Nordhaus argued the best way to limit emissions was to calculate the cost of a fixed level of emissions and then require firms or government­s to pay for those costs.

The Nobel Prize committee cited Nordhaus for his work in showing that “the most efficient remedy for problems caused by greenhouse gases is a global scheme of universall­y imposed carbon taxes.”

Nordhaus also was honored for his role in developing a model that allows economists to analyse the costs of climate change.

Romer, 62, sought to explain the role of technologi­cal advances in driving economic growth. His work was inspired by a desire to understand the remarkable accelerati­on in growth that began with the Industrial Revolution.

Romer’s big idea was to argue that policymake­rs could foster technologi­cal innovation, for example, by investing in research and developmen­t and by writing patent laws that provided sufficient rewards for new ideas without letting inventors permanentl­y monopolise those rewards. He argued that national difference­s in such public policies helped to explain difference­s in economic growth rates. Romer said in an interview that the value of his work was in being precise about a broadly intuitive idea. “It helps to see connection­s that weren’t obvious at first,” he said.

In 2016, Romer was named chief economist of the World Bank, a prestigiou­s perch for a developmen­t economist. But he resigned 15 months later, in January 2018.

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