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Holmstrom returns with unfinished Sound Tigers business
Holmstrom returns with unfinished Sound Tigers business
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⊠returns with unfinished Sound Tigers business BRIDGEPORT â Ben Holmstrom returned for ⊠summer with a little unfinished business. He had high hopes for ⊠numbers than about that unfinished business. âI think for me it ⊠âŠ
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The decision to award the #Nobel Prize in #economics this year to Oliver #Hart and Bengt #Holmstrom for their work in #contract #theory is further proof that some of the best work in economics is being done to understand the rules of the gameâand the contracts that determine our actions in the real world.
Two U.S.-based professors won the Nobel prize in economics on Monday for studying how to best design contracts, work that sheds light on when it makes sense to give a CEO a bonus or privatize public services like schools, hospitals and prisons.
British-born Oliver Hart of Harvard University and Finnish economist Bengt Holmstrom of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Finland will share the 8 million kronor ($930,000 U.S.) award for their contributions to contract theory.
Thatâs a field of research that deals with incentives and risks involved in contracts drawn up between companies and employees, banks and lenders or insurance agents and their customers.
In research in the 1970s, â80s and â90s, Hart and Holmstrom created ânew theoretical toolsâ that shed light on how contracts help people and companies deal with conflicting interests and the âpotential pitfallsâ that occur when contracts are poorly designed, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said.
âThese kinds of insights into how we should design contracts are very important because we donât want to give the wrong incentives to people,â said Nobel committee member Tomas Sjostrom. âWe donât want to reward them for things that they were not responsible for. We want to reward the right thing.â
Hart, 68, is a London-born U.S. citizen who has taught at Harvard since 1993. Holmstrom, 67, is an academic from Finland who used to serve on the board of the countryâs mobile phone company Nokia.
Speaking to reporters in Stockholm by telephone, Holmstrom said he felt very lucky and grateful.
âI certainly did not expect it, at least at this time, so I was very surprised and very happy, of course,â he said.
In the 1970s Holmstrom showed how a principal, for example a companyâs shareholders, should design an optimal contract for an agent, like the CEO. His âinformativeness principleâ showed how the contract should link the agentâs pay to information relevant to his or her performance, carefully weighing risks against incentives, the academy said.
Holmstrom said his incentive to study contract theory came before he was an academic, when he was working for a company in the 1970s that tried to use computers to figure how to make strategic plans.
âThatâs when I realized that the issue wasnât really about the difficulty of coming up with the best plans,â he said. âThe bigger issue was also to create incentives for people to give the right information that is needed for these plans and incentivize them in general.â
Hart made fundamental contributions to a new branch of contract theory in the mid-1980s. His findings on âincomplete contractsâ shed new light on the ownership and control of businesses, the academy said.
âHis research provides us with theoretical tools for studying questions such as which kinds of companies should merge, the proper mix of debt and equity financing, and which institutions such as schools or prisons ought to be privately or publicly owned,â the academy said.
It cited a 1997 article co-authored by Hart which highlighted how private contractors have stronger incentives for investing in both quality and cost reduction. The authors argued that the incentives for cost reduction sometimes is too strong, and expressed particular concern about privately-run prisons, the academy said.
The U.S. Department of Justice recently decided to stop using private prisons after a report showed the conditions are worse than in government-run prisons.
Pennsylvania State University economist Ran Shorrer, who taught contract theory as a graduate student at Harvard, said Hart and Holmstrom have had a huge influence on the way corporations decide to pay executives.
âAny modern compensation scheme is informed by their work,â he said.
The economics prize is not an original Nobel Prize. Formally called the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, it was added to the others in 1968 by Swedenâs central bank.
The Nobel Prizes in medicine, physics, chemistry and the Nobel Peace Prize were announced last week. This yearâs Nobel announcements will finish Thursday with the literature award.
Each award is worth 8 million kronor, or about $930,000. The laureates will collect them on Dec. 10, the anniversary of prize founder Alfred Nobelâs death in 1896.
(via the 2016 economics Nobel for contract theory)
Oliver Hart and Bengt Holmstrom Win Nobel in Economics for Work on Contracts
Oliver Hart and Bengt Holmstrom Win Nobel in Economics for Work on Contracts
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Nobel Prize in Economics Awarded
Bengt Holmstrom, a Finnish-born economics and administration professor at M.I.T, and Oliver Hart, a British-born economics professor at Harvard, gained the 2016 Nobel Prize in Economics.
By REUTERS on Publish Date October 10, 2016.
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