Article 34QAG Richard Thaler is a controversial Nobel prize winner –but a deserving one

Richard Thaler is a controversial Nobel prize winner –but a deserving one

by
Robert Shiller
from Economics | The Guardian on (#34QAG)

The US academic's behavioural research shows how to focus economics more decisively on real and important problems

" What is behavioural economics?

The winner of this year's Nobel prize in economics, Richard Thaler of the University of Chicago, is a controversial choice. Thaler is known for his lifelong pursuit of behavioural economics (and its subfield, behavioural finance), which is the study of economics (and finance) from a psychological perspective. For some in the profession, the idea that psychological research should even be part of economics has generated hostility for years.

Not from me. I find it wonderful that the Nobel Foundation chose Thaler. The economics Nobel has already been awarded to a number of people who can be classified as behavioural economists, including George Akerlof, Robert Fogel, Daniel Kahneman, Elinor Ostrom, and me. With the addition of Thaler, we now account for approximately 6% of all Nobel economics prizes ever awarded.

Related: What is behavioural economics?

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