William Nordhaus, Paul Romer bag Nobel Prize in Economics

ANI  |  New Delhi [India] 

and bagged the Nobel Prize in Economic Science for addressing the need to create long-term sustainable economic growth, broadening the scope of economic analysis. They have constructed models that explain how the market interacts with nature and knowledge.

Romer's solution, initially published in 1990, laid the foundation of contemporary endogenous growth theory. The theory explains how ideas are different to other goods and require specific conditions to thrive in a market.

Nordhaus' findings deal with interactions between society and nature. He had become increasingly worried about the combustion of fossil fuel resulting in a warmer climate. In the mid-1990s, he became the first person to create an integrated assessment model, a quantitative that describes the global interplay between the and the climate. His integrates theories and empirical results from physics, chemistry and Nordhaus' is used to examine the consequences of climate policy interventions, for example, carbon taxes.

Nordhaus was born in Albuquerque, He completed his undergraduate work at in 1963 and received his PhD in in 1967 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, He is a member of the and a Fellow of the He is on the research staff of the and has been a of the Brookings Panel on Economic Activity, Washington, since 1972. Nordhaus is current or past of several scientific journals and has served on the Committees of the and the In 2004, he was awarded the prize of "Distinguished Fellow" by the

He has served on several committees of the including the Committee on Nuclear and Alternative Energy Systems, the Panel on Policy Implications of and the Recently, he directed the Yale Project on Non-Market Accounting, backed by the He has also authored several books.

Recently, he has undertaken the "G-Econ project," which provides the first comprehensive measures of economic activity at a geophysical scale.

While, Paul Romer, an economist and policy entrepreneur, is the founding of the Stern Urbanization Project, which conducts applied research on ways in which policymakers can use the growth to create economic opportunity and undertake systemic social reform in cities. He is also a University at the and of of Urban Management.

Before coming to NYU, Romer taught at of Business. While there, he took an entrepreneurial detour to start Aplia, an company dedicated to increasing student effort and classroom engagement. To date, students have submitted more than one billion answers to homework problems on the website.

Professor Romer serves on the board of trustees for the He is also a for Community Solutions, a not-for-profit dedicated to strengthening communities and ending homelessness.

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First Published: Tue, October 09 2018. 04:50 IST