Dayton Daily News

2 Americans win Nobel for economics

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Two Amer- STOCKHOLM — icans won the Nobel Prize in economics on Monday, one for studying the economics of climate change and the other for showing how to help foster the inno- vation needed to solve such a problem.

William Nordhaus of Yale University and Paul Romer of New York University will share the 9 million-kronor ($1.01 mil- lion) award, the Royal Swed- ish Academy of Sciences said.

Nordhaus has called for the world to combat climate change by imposing a universal tax on carbon. Carbon dioxide, which is emitted when fossil fuels are burned, is a heat-trapping “green- house gas” blamed for global warming, and a tax would make polluters pay for the costs imposed on society.

Romer has studied the way innovation drives prosperity and has looked at ways to encour- age it. He told a news confer- ence Monday that his research had given him hope that peo- ple can solve even a problem as difficult as a warming planet.

“Many people think that deal ing with protecting the envi- ronment will be so costly and so hard that they just want to ignore the problem. They want to deny it exists,” Romer said. “I hope the prize today could help everyone see that humans are capable of amazing accom- plishments when we set about trying to do something.”

While the two academics worked separately, their research dovetails on an issue that has become pressing. The question of climate change remains politicall­y sensitive, especially in big oil-producing countries like the United States, which Pres- ident Donald Trump has pulled out of the Paris accord on fighting climate change.

“It’s an ingenious pairing,” said David Warsh, author of the 2007 book “Knowledge and the Wealth of Nations” about the award. “Nordhaus has been concerned all along with repairing the damage” to the global environmen­t. “Romer has been writing about the means at your disposal” to attack such a tech- nological challenge.

Per Stromberg, head of the Nobel economics prize committee, said the award is “about the long-run future of the world economy.”

The prize comes just a day after an internatio­nal panel of scientists warned that preventing an extra single degree of global warming could make a life-or-death difference in the next few decades for multitudes of people and ecosystems.

Nordhaus has argued that climate change should be considered a “global public good,” like public health and internatio­nal trade, and regulated accordingl­y, but not through a command-and-control approach. Instead, by agreeing on a global price for burning carbon that reflects its whole cost, this primary cause of rising temperatur­es could be traded and taxed, putting market forces to work on the problem.

Many economists have since endorsed the concept of taxing carbon and using this financial lever to influence societal behavior. But adopting the regulatory frameworks on a global scale has been a challenge, and the world’s political leaders are failing to meet it, the head of the United Nations said.

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