Briton, American win Nobel economics prize
Research helps planners when information incomplete
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (CNN) -- Briton James Mirrlees and
William Vickrey, a naturalized American,
were awarded the 1996 Nobel Prize for economics on October 8. They were
honored for their separate work analyzing the consequences of
incomplete financial information.
The citation from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said
research in this area tries to show how companies or
governments can make decisions on such matters as contracts
or taxes -- even when they lack complete information.
Just three days later after learning of the award, Vickrey died of a heart attack on October 11.
Practical applications
Mirrlees' and Vickrey's individual research has been extended to practical applications,
including the loaning of money by banks or the auction of
treasury bonds. For example, a bank does not know a
borrower's future income, and an auctioneer does not have
complete information about a potential buyer's willingness to
pay. In addition, governments have to "devise an income tax
system without much knowledge about the productivity of
individual citizens," the citation said.
The academy said Vickrey's research concerned the properties
of different types of auctions and how they can be best
designed to generate economic efficiency. Mirrlees, 25 years
later, capitalized on Vickrey's work in relation to income
tax planning.
Cambridge, Columbia
Mirrlees was born in Minnigaff, Scotland, in 1936 and is now
teaching economics at the University of Cambridge, in
England.
Vickrey was born in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, in
1914 and had been Professor Emeritus at Columbia University,
New York, where he also served as a tax adviser between 1937
and 1947.
The $1.12 million prize was the third of the six Nobels announced this year.
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