Krugman gets the Nobel
Almost a decade ago, I was working on an article for Fortune about the then-current state of economics. The narrative I settled on was one in which in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Cambridge, Mass., had been the birthplace of a new economic mainstream:
This was the context in which the young scholars of Harvard and MIT learned economics in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Keynesian macroeconomics was dead, but nothing had sprung up in its place. Microeconomics, meanwhile, had moved away from the dead certainties of the past into a much more interesting thicket of research possibilities. The mathematical models that had come to form the basis of academic economics were shifting from general equilibrium, in which everything worked out for the best, to multiple equilibriums, in which it might not. "That was kind of a golden age for economic theorizing," says Krugman.
Krugman is of course Paul Krugman, winner of this year's Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economics in Honor of Alfred Nobel for some of his golden-age theorizing. He's the first of the 1970s/1980s MIT/Harvard crowd--a group that includes such familiar-to-noneconomists names as Larry Summers, Ben Bernanke, Frederic Mishkin, Greg Mankiw and Glenn Hubbard--to win a Nobel. And that's pretty much what one could have predicted back in 1999. In fact, I distinctly remember Mankiw predicting it, although, sadly, I didn't put that into my article. Here's what I did write:
Krugman, whose academic work probably best represents the direction economics has taken, built lots of mathematical models of real-world economic phenomena. The models, Krugman says, are constructed upon a couple of basic principles: "self-interested behavior and interaction--$100 bills don't lie in the street for very long, and you don't have sales that aren't purchases." Beyond that there are no clear rules. "What you end up looking for is a specific set of strategic simplifications," he says.
The two models that made Krugman's name in the late 1970s both involved international economics. One concluded that currency crises were rational, inevitable reactions to untenable government policies. The other overturned the conventional economic wisdom that countries could gain an advantage in trade only because of better technology or greater resources--by showing that the increasing returns inherent in making huge quantities of a product can lock in an advantage.
These two models shared no grand theme or ideology, and matters got even murkier when Krugman tried to draw policy conclusions from them. He gradually came over to the view that currency collapses can also result from self-fulfilling investor panics that overrun even countries with sensible economic policies. This has led him to conclude that controls on capital flows sometimes make sense. But he does not believe in restricting trade, even though his increasing-returns model seems to suggest advantages for the sort of protectionist, volume-building tactics used by Japanese industries in the 1980s.
The Nobel committee gave Krugman the prize for work growing out of that second model, on increasing returns to trade, which he introduced in a paper in the Journal of International Economics in 1979:
Krugman's approach is based on the premise that many goods and services can be produced more cheaply in long series, a concept generally known as economies of scale. Meanwhile, consumers demand a varied supply of goods. As a result, small-scale production for a local market is replaced by large-scale production for the world market, where firms with similar products compete with one another.
None of this, of course, has anything to do with why most people who are familiar with Krugman's name are familiar with it. As the Nobel gang concludes in its "Information for the Public":
In addition to his scientific research, Paul Krugman is highly appreciated by his students as a pedagogical lecturer and author of textbooks. In wider circles, he is better known as a lively blogger and spirited columnist in the The New York Times.
I imagine there will be lots of speculation that the Nobel committee is trying to reward Krugman for his critiques of the Bush administration, his reasonably prescient writing on the current financial crisis, or just the fact that he's such a great blogger. His post this morning:
A funny thing happened to me this morning …
I make no claim to know what mischievousness lurks in the minds of Swedes, so maybe all those really were factors. But it's also true that Krugman has been considered a likely eventual winner of this prize for a long time.
Update: Tyler Cowen, another product of that Cambridge-Mass.-in-the-70s-and-80s crowd (albeit on the late side; he got his PhD from Harvard in 1987), has some of the best stuff on the meaning of Krugman's Nobel. A tiny sample:
I have to say I did not expect him to win until Bush left office, as I thought the Swedes wanted the resulting discussion to focus on Paul's academic work rather than on issues of politics. So I am surprised by the timing but not by the choice.
What? Bush is still in office? I thought this was the Paulson administration. In other interesting posts: Dani Rodrik points out, somewhat obliquely, that Krugman getting the prize means Jagdish Bhagwati's Nobel prospects sure aren't looking good (at least, that's how I read it). Ezra Klein finds a nice clear explanation of Krugman's trade work. And a certain TigerHawk fears that "the depreciating but nonetheless potent prestige of the Nobel Prize will only make [Krugman] more insufferable."
Update 2: Harvard's Edward Glaeser, who doesn't have much in common with Krugman when it comes to politics, has written a nice appreciation of Krugman's economics for the NYT's Economix blog.
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1
It's also true that, as Krugman himself has pointed out, a Nobel Prize is hardly a validation of every political view the recipient ever expressed.
This subtlety is lost on Krugman's right wing critics, of course, who believe that this morning's prize is proof of Europe's evil terrorist-loving America-hating, and the coming US socialist state.
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2
As an avid reader of Paul Krugman's columns, and an enthusiastic supporter of his views, I am delighted.
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3
re: Elvis Elvisberg, I think it's the case that the Nobel economics committee can be quite conservative in a fussy European way. One of the committee members, Per Krussell, is a colleague of Krugman's at Princeton
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4
brief discussion of the Nobel Committee's rationale for the award to Krugman is at http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/2008/info.pdf
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5
I think by "insufferable" TigerHawk means "harder to dismiss"
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6
Obama just made his speech and I only caught a portion, but I'll be looking for the complete video from CNN. One thing I did take note of is he did the Carter thing. He said after this crisis, the country needs to reexamine what it is all about, and fundamentally change away from a debt based society to a saving based society again.
Now those were not the exact words of him, nor Carter for that matter, but it did remind me of the Carter vs. Regan argument. Bacevich mentioned it in one of his interviews recently. He basically said that Carter was a failed president, but there was one concept that he understood that was never accepted by the American public. Bacevich argues that Carter (in the malaise speech?) noted that the dependency on foreign oil and credit was slowly but surely weakening the country, and that America needed to become more frugal, more or less. Bacevich further argued that Regan, in contrast said that Carter was talking nonsense. America can do whatever it wants, and there is always "more" to be had, and we can have whatever we dream of if we just put our minds to it (irregardless of consequences, mind you).
Bacevich says that basic argument between those two concepts lost Carter the election. Let us see how accepting of the notion America is this time on Nov. 4th. I did not do Bacevich, Obama, Regan, or Carter justice in my articulation of the discussion, but it can be found here:
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7
Oh, and I meant to add: Bravo to you Krugman!
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8
Maurice2u,
"the country needs to reexamine what it is all about, and fundamentally change away from a debt based society to a saving based society again."
That's great. Does the Jr. Senator from Illinios say exactly how we do that? I've heard various proposals, invest in alternative energy, produce more, go green, ect. They are all short on specifics.
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9
If your eyes glaze over when "economics" is mentioned, you need to read Paul Krugman in the NY Times. He projects his thoughts in a clear manner .... easy for all to understand. Congratulations!
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10
Bravo, Professor Krugman!! I've been an avid fan since my undergrad years in Economics. Still have my first Int'l Economics Theory & Policy book from 1991 that you authored.
To non-economists: part of what makes Krugman's work so good is his ability to express very complex ideas and concepts in such a way that every day readers are able to grasp and appreciate.
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11
Bravo, Professor Krugman. Bill O'Rielly will be bursting with envy. How ironic!
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