Article 4SPNK The Guardian view on the economics Nobel: worthy winners | Editorial

The Guardian view on the economics Nobel: worthy winners | Editorial

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Editorial
from Economics | The Guardian on (#4SPNK)
The work of Esther Duflo, Abhijit Banerjee and Michael Kremer on poverty deserved this accolade, but both the prize and the discipline need reform

Readers of this paper on 6 June 2011 may have spotted an editorial titled "In praise of... Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee". It was indeed a paean to the two Massachusetts Institute of Technology economists and their work to lift people out of poverty. "They make a subtle case for one big argument," we wrote. "Aid really can help poor people, provided the money follows the evidence." Scroll forward almost a decade to this week, and the judging committee behind the "Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel" announced that the pair would win this year's award, alongside their colleague Michael Kremer. To the lucky trio sharing a prize of 9 million Swedish kronor (currently 716,000, although sterling's value in these Brexit-addled times can go down as well as down), we extend our congratulations. To the judges, we say: what took you so long?

A number of precedents are being broken or tested by this welcome decision. At 46, Prof Duflo is the youngest-ever winner of this prize. She is also only the second woman to win it. Handed out since 1969, it was never given to one of the major economists of the 20th century, Joan Robinson. Prof Banerjee is only the second Indian to win it, and one of very few winners to come from outside the west. Most of the world economy is not in the west, and many of the most interesting thinkers do not come from there, as is now reflected in the senior echelons of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the Bank for International Settlements. Alas, the prize givers at the Sveriges Riksbank have yet to catch up. Instead, the prize has gone to some odd choices such Milton Friedman. In 1997, Myron Scholes and Robert Merton won the prize for their work on derivatives. The very next year, the hedge fund they ran according to their model lost $4bn in just six weeks and required a state-organised bailout.

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