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Paul Krugman Awarded Nobel Prize For Economics

zogger writes in his journal, "The guy who put together the concept of geographical location combined with cheap transportation leading to 'like trades with like' and the rise of superindustrial trading blocs has won the Nobel economics science prize. He's a bigtime critic of a lot of this administration's policies, and is unabashedly an FDR-economy styled fella. Here is his blog at the NYTimes." Reader yoyoq adds that Krugman's career choice was inspired by reading Asimov's Foundation series at a young age.

29 of 425 comments (clear)

  1. Deserved by RJBeery · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not saying that Paul Krugman does not deserve a Nobel Prize, but I would like to point out that the judging and awarding process of said prize is subject to the political agenda of those involved, just like the wording of this submission.

    1. Re:Deserved by SerpentMage · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Interesting...

      Did you maybe happen to look at what he won his prize on?

      It actually is a very interesting theory and idea...

      Oh but wait he is a LIBERAL... and thus he can't have good ideas...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  2. Playing up his anti-Bush sentiment by mcg1969 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    only serves to diminish the value of this award. IF he starts to link it to his political views, then he'll bring derision upon himself and the Nobel committee. But he doesn't need to, because in his prior life as an full-time economist he did work that was genuinely worthy of recognition. I've spoken with several conservative economists who admire that work, even as they wondered "what happened to him?"

  3. We really should have listened to him 3 years ago by StevenMaurer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Safe as Houses

    A snippet (only 3 paragraphs to fall within fair use):

    I used to live next door to a Russian emigre. One day he asked me to explain something that puzzled him about his new country. "This place seems very rich," he said, "but I never see anyone making anything. How does the country earn its money?"

    ...

    In other words, a fuller answer to my former neighbor would be that these days, Americans make a living selling each other houses, paid for with money borrowed from the Chinese. Somehow, that doesn't seem like a sustainable lifestyle.

    How solid, then, is America's economic recovery? The British have a phrase that applies: "safe as houses." Our economy is as safe as houses. Unfortunately, given current prices and our dependence on foreign lenders, houses aren't safe at all.

    Whine all you want about the Nobel Committee having a political agenda. Right is right. And Krugman was right.

  4. It's not a Nobel Prize by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel."

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  5. There is no Nobel Prize in economics by riker1384 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences is a prize given by the Bank of Sweden, not by the Nobel Foundation. It is not one of the prizes established by Alfred Nobel. It's named after him and inspired by Nobel Prizes, but it's not a Nobel Prize.

    1. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by Marcika · · Score: 5, Informative
      It is endowed by the Bank of Sweden, but it is awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, same as the science Nobel prizes.

      Besides, it is on the Nobel website, equivalent to all the other prizes. If it's good enough for them...

      So you might be technically right, but only in the pedant's sense.

    2. Re:There is no Nobel Prize in economics by Bartab · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's not actually "good enough for them"

      http://nobelprize.org/nomination/economics/nominators.html

      The Prize in Economics is not a Nobel Prize.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
  6. Re:The other side..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Huh. I wonder if you understand the difference between "inspired to go into the field" and "puts stock in". Just kidding, I already know the answer.

    I mean seriously, what if he said he was inspired to go into aerospace engineering by the same books? Would you complain that he puts too much stock in books that require hypothetical FTL drives to be invented, and that his ambitions to eventually people a colony on mars requires science we don't have yet?

  7. Re:Flat earth... by 77Punker · · Score: 4, Funny

    Nobody comes here to stay current with the news; we come here for discussion that's better than most other places.

  8. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by blueg3 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Good job confusing the Nobel Peace Prize, the Prize in Economics, and the scientific Nobel Prizes, which are selected by different groups and with different criteria.

  9. Re:The other side..... by jmorris42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > The foundation series, and the robot series as well, both have this nasty premise
    > that people should be manipulated by the characters that Asimov considers superior.

    Asimov was a socialist. Of course this was from a time when all right thinking people believed socialism was the future, but he never appears to have totally freed his mind from many of the basic assumptions that underlie the system of ideas we lump under the word. In his case the notions behind 'scientific socialism' seems to have been deeply engrained into him. The idea that scientists and assorted elite intellectuals were the rightful ruling class; that under their enlightened rule the lot of the masses would be improved was pervasive during his formative years and carried over into much of his work. It doesn't take much imagination to see how the idea of the new soviet man morphed into the all knowing benevolent rule of the robots in his later works. It became obvious to all thinking creatures that no human could know enough, be just enough, etc. to actually be entrusted with the sort of absolute power fascism/socialism/communism implied, thus his later works substituited robots.

    Notice how his later books reveal the robots to have absolutely taken over all important aspects of human society, but that we are told that this isn't a totalitarian distopia, nay the future projected in the book is virtually a utopia. We are carefully lead to believe we are still in control because we have a need to believe we are free people who are in control of our destiny, but that it is a carefully maintained fiction,

    More importantly, a careful reader can see that the whole system is already blowing itself to hell. The robots have already discarded the laws of robotics, substituiting for them a notion that they should generally follow the laws in terms of protecting humans as a group if not as individuals, but hey! ya gotta break a few eggs to mame an omelette. They allow humans to die, both by acts of omission and commission in the name of their new greater mission to serve humanity by ruling them. Where have we heard that crap before?

    --
    Democrat delenda est
  10. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by SerpentMage · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Conservative talk radio is consistent? Actually let's put this in context. [fill in the blank] talk radio is consistent?

    One thing that people have to remember is that conservatives more likely than not are not going to win awards. And that liberals will...

    Think hard about this. What is a conservative? Somebody who believes in their ideals and fundamentals. Thus they are not thinking about the future, but the past.

    On the other hand a liberal challenges the notion of today and looks at what could be.

    A conservative today is yesterday's liberal.

    Go back in history and look at conservative stances, and liberal stances.

    Women rights: Conservative of 2000 would say hey yes why not. Liberal of 1800 would say "hey yes why not." Conservative of 1800 would say, "blasphemy"

    So you see, a conservative will always be two or three, or four steps behind the real action...

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  11. Re:The other side..... by philspear · · Score: 4, Informative

    Of course others differ in their opinion of Krugman....

    I have to point out that the "other" side does not have a nobel prize or a college diploma, and appears on Fox news and National review.

    (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Luskin)

  12. Re:One more nobel winner anti-reaganmics by MagikSlinger · · Score: 5, Informative

    How many more politicians and faux-news talking heads will continue to push the pseudo-scientific religion that is reaganomics?

    Humans are capable of believing untrue things for a very long time, even after reality begins to seriously challenge those beliefs. The Left has long-cherished beliefs (Example: Unions are good for workers, My Counter-Example: The number of Unions up until the 60s that prohibited blacks from working at a union shop). The Right has its long-cherished beliefs.

    There are a lot of possible explanations why people are like that, but the more important thing is to engage those people by asking questions about the basis of their belief and learning yourself. If someone says something, and you don't know if it's true or not, take some effort to find out if it is. Most of the time, you can Google the issue and find a lot of people have done the hard work for you. You just have to verify if their logic is sound and inferences are valid.

    Krugman, via his blog and columns, does try his best to do this. In fact, he often posts links to early versions of his papers and mathematics on his NY Times blog and lets his readers pick it apart. He and Tyler Cowan (a libertarian leaning economist) have very civil debates via their blogs.

    Most *-wing sites simply tune out contrary voices with more chanting and weak arguments that bolster that community's feelings on right and wrong. In short: people judge arguments by its truthiness, not its validity.

    And for the record, we cannot judge if Reagnomics worked because Reagonomics is:

    1. reduce the growth of government spending,
    2. reduce marginal tax rates on income from labor and capital,
    3. reduce government regulation of the economy,
    4. control the money supply to reduce inflation.

    To be honest, I don't believe he achieved those four goals during his presidency, so I'm not sure one can say Reagonomics worked or not:

    1. Government spending as a percentage of GDP
    2. Tax receipts as percentage of GDP
    3. Quantifying regulation: Notice the Clinton years come out looking pretty good too (i.e., congress is as much to blame/credit as the President)
    4. Inflation from 1913 to present
    --
    The bitter lessons of a veteran coder: http://bitterprogrammer.blogspot.com
  13. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by wrecked · · Score: 5, Informative

    I had a real respect for him when he mentioned he was inspired by Asimov.

    For more geek cred: while at Princeton in 1978, Krugman wrote a tongue-in-cheek paper titled The Theory of Interstellar Trade (PDF) (see Slashdot article on it).

  14. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by Rhinobird · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is no Nobel prize in Economics. It's an associated prize, "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel", was instituted by Sweden's central bank in 1968

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_Prize
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sveriges_Riksbank_Prize_in_Economic_Sciences_in_Memory_of_Alfred_Nobel

    --
    If Mr. Edison had thought smarter he wouldn't sweat as much. --Nikola Tesla
  15. Re:Fixing Republican Depressions, yet again. by StevenMaurer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We had bubbles and depressions before FDR, but the government had very little power to interfere in the recovery process, and they were typically over in two years or less.

    Your assertions don't square against known history. The panic of 1857 was interrupted only by the civil war. The panic of 1873 lasted five years. The panic of 1893 lasted nearly four.

    And in all of them, the American governments of the day did indeed try to take various measures to stop them, although they weren't always very effective.

    And these panics were far more serious. For people who lost their life savings in a supposedly guaranteed savings account, they could be literally deadly, given that retirees did not have Social Security to fall back on. If you didn't have an extended family who could provide food, you could (and would) starve to death.

    Insofar as your attack on FDR and farm price supports, you are clearly not aware that some goods and services (most notably rail transportation) did not substantially fall during that period. The result: it cost more to transport goods to market than you could get by selling them. So your idea that there would be food for all, if only bad old FDR hadn't stopped the market from working, is, to put it mildly, completely unsupported by fact.

    I would go on, but given the tenor of your original post, I'm pretty sure any additional logic or fast would be wasted on you. There's a rule about arguing on the internet, and believe me, I'm not retarded.

  16. Re:The other side..... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    More importantly, a careful reader can see that the whole system is already blowing itself to hell. The robots have already discarded the laws of robotics, substituiting for them a notion that they should generally follow the laws in terms of protecting humans as a group if not as individuals, but hey! ya gotta break a few eggs to mame an omelette. They allow humans to die, both by acts of omission and commission in the name of their new greater mission to serve humanity by ruling them. Where have we heard that crap before?

    It doesn't take careful reading at all to see the system is blowing itself to hell. The failure of the 3 Laws begins in the second short story of I, Robot, and by the end of the same book the robots control everything and are already sacrificing individuals for the "good of the whole". The entire point of the book is that he hypothesizes these perfect laws that you can somehow program a robot to never violate, and then proceeds to show all the ways these "perfect" laws fail and yield undesirable results.

    So given that he goes out of his way to show you how the system fails in rather deliberate and obvious ways, I'm not sure how you conclude that his point was that totalitarian socialism works as long as you have perfect beings in control. Is it that there are characters who argue in favor of the system, without being overtly evil like O'Brien of 1984? That's not Asimov's style.

    I suppose you would also say the point of Foundation is that once you have invented psychohistory, you can control the future perfectly and the masses will simply do what you want with no need for individualism, even though at every point in time it took daring and creative individuals a great deal of effort to actually overcome the obstacles?

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  17. Re:Not just anti-Bush by jbeach · · Score: 4, Funny
    And not only has he been rude to those he's disagreed with - Krugman's actually had the horrible to tend to be right! And about one issue after another, too!

    I mean, if only he'd had the common decency to NOT predict the housing bubble, and the complete havoc it could wreak on our economy. Then everyone who told him he was totally wrong wouldn't be nursing their hurt feelings.

    The sheer nerve of that guy!

    --
    The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
  18. Re:Seems like a very cool guy by Lumpmoose · · Score: 5, Funny

    For even more geek cred: he made an 'All your base' reference on Olbermann last month: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pVsYZo86S-k (0:48)

  19. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Right is right. And Krugman was right.

    No. Everything you are crediting him with saying was WRONG.

    "This place seems very rich," he said, "but I never see anyone making anything. How does the country earn its money?"

    In fact the US is the #1 manufacturer in the world, more than twice as much as #2, and several times ahead of the likes of China.

    The notion that we are a nation that makes nothing but houses, is idiotic. Go anywhere in the world, and you'll see mostly US-made airplanes (Boeing), turbines (GE, Pratt&Whitney), heavy construction equipment (CAT, Mack, Peterbuilt, etc.), et al.

    Our economy is as safe as houses. Unfortunately, given current prices and our dependence on foreign lenders, houses aren't safe at all.

    Nothing here predicts the US bank and lending market collapse. Quite the opposite really. In fact foreign lenders got the short end of the stick this time around, so they were the un-safe ones. He's only right that prices were ridiculously high, but that's a bit like predicting the sky will be blue in the future...

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  20. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by bendodge · · Score: 4, Informative

    A true economic conservative is someone who believes in traditional economic liberalism. (Liberalism used to mean 'freedomism'.)

    --
    The government can't save you.
  21. Re:We really should have listened to him 3 years a by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Topics here have certainly been getting much more politicized than I recall them ever being before, and diverging from factual and technical discussion more than they used to. It's not over the past few weeks, however, it's been long in coming. There were complaints about the process a couple years ago. Introducing the YRO section just made the editors feel better about doing it more and more, and seemingly sped-up the process...

    Technical discussions have become similarly undermined as well, as the demographics of /. have changed... With 90% of comments on technical stories being jokes, mindless anecdotes, and other clearly baseless nonsense that gets modded up.

    But in both cases, for every 100 morons, there is still one very well informed individual occasionally posting a comment, and shedding important new light and context on a subject... So, IMHO, it's still worth staying, even as a signal-to-noise slowly increases.

    I've seen repeated phases like this in the past as well. A few years ago, the trolls and flamers were winning, and discussions were even worse than they are now. It's just that now there seems little way to combat it, and it's rather condoned and encouraged by the editors, for the sake of more page views I assume. Hence the regular banalization of stories here.

    But as I said, despite the increasing quantities of smoke, I'd still say the

    Just a few more Bush Regime diehards

    That seems a strange comment to make. The hard core left-wing crowd that mindlessly bash everything from the right is just as bad, and, at least appear to be, far more numerous.

    There are good ideas and bad ideas on both sides. But picking the good from the bad requires the kind of intelligent discussion of policy issues we haven't seen here in some time. Of course if you're buying into the political party nonsense, it's easy to think that everyone on the other side of an issue are drooling morons, while your side is always right...

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  22. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Admiral+Ag · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "The other option is that the nobel committee has a clear bias towards what Americans view as the left,"

    No.

    The Nobel Prizes are Scandinavian institutions. To Scandinavians, what Americans think is "left" looks like extreme far right wing kookery, and what Americans think is "right" is simply beyond the pale.

    Americans have no business talking about the left and the right in terms of their own politics which is extremely right wing, extremely religious and extremely authoritarian compared to the rest of the world's democracies. You guys need to realize that it's you that are out of step and it is your politics that is weird and kooky.

    How's that then. You've made the Canadians look normal!! Hang your heads in shame.

    --
    "by that I mean people who don't sit on slashdot all day wondering why everyone else isn't building robots" DECS
  23. citation needed by yali · · Score: 5, Informative

    Some supporting evidence making it hard to fit this prize into an ideological box...

    In his popular writing, including his NY Times column, Krugman is a pretty outspoken liberal on most issues. But within his academic expertise -- which is what he won the prize for -- he is very willing to depart from liberal orthodoxy if that's where logic and evidence lead him.

  24. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 4, Informative

    Thank you. I am moderately conservative, in the old Goldwater sense. I, and many like me, want nothing to do with that hatemongering lying bastards that have taken over the label of 'conservative'. 'Conservative' used to mean wanting incremental, cautious change, keeping what works, and being cautious about expanding the mission of government.

    The label conservative, these days, means 'radical religious nationalist'. It has nothing to do with the traditional ethos of small government and individual freedoms.

    Changing the subject slightly, I will note that I agree with Krugman more often than I disagree, and I think that a lot of careful economic analysis shows that more governmental intervention may be in the best interests of most of society. I would like to see us cautiously move in this direction.

    --
    I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
  25. Re:Agenda: It's everywhere! by gad_zuki! · · Score: 4, Informative

    Granted to the US is to the right of europe, buts funny you mention this because there really isnt a nobel peace prize in economics. This award established in 1968 by a bank with a lot of political pull. Its not a Nobel award. It just lifts the name. The name of this award is: The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.

    So in other words you're criticizing the US by holding up a questionable award which only exists because of authoritarian political clout by a financial institution in 1960s Sweden? Pot meet Kettle.

  26. Re:Hayek and Friedman got one too by unlametheweak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your Flame definitely shows the integrity (or lack thereof) of your arguments. I note that you condemn Yasir Arafat and not Shimon Peres or Yitzak Rabin.