2025 Nobel Economics Prize and Economic History

Syllabus: Issues relating to planning, mobilization, of resources, growth, development and employment

Context: 2025 Nobel Economics Prize awarded to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion, Peter Howitt focusing on innovation economics.

Mokyr’s Core Argument

  • Growth as Social Technology
    • Modern growth is social technology before mechanical; influenced by scholar David Hounshell’s pedagogy significantly.
    • Industrial Enlightenment relied on civic machinery: printers, coffee houses, learned societies, guilds enabling knowledge travel.
    • Apprenticeships, shop-floor heuristics, rule-of-thumb engineering formed codebase of progress and industrial development.
    • Guilds in contestable markets incubated capability; ossified guilds throttled entry blocking innovation and competition.
    • Schumpeter’s creative destruction works only when social plumbing allows new ideas displacing entrenched privilege.
  • Complementary Laureates’ Contributions
    • Aghion-Howitt Schumpeterian growth framework provides dynamic microfoundations for innovation and entrepreneurship processes.
    • Innovation rents attract entrepreneurs; incumbents litigate/lobby; policy either hardens moats or protects productive churn.
    • Engine misfires when experimentation costly, entry blocked; hums when institutions favor contestability and diffusion.
    • Mokyr shows how societies built engine; Aghion-Howitt show tuning under pressure maintaining innovation dynamics.

Contemporary Relevance

  • AI and Jobs
    • Technology shocks rarely one-for-one job killers; they reprice competencies, reorganize tasks requiring transition management.
    • Social question: who bears cost of moving from old tasks to new ones requiring policy intervention.
    • Aghion-Howitt injunction: protect process rather than incumbents through portable benefits, skills bridges, data portability.
  • Public Debt Management
    • Dutch and British states became credible borrowers by building civic capacity: tax systems, representative institutions, enforceable contracts.
    • Fiscal sustainability is institutional, not merely arithmetic; requires capacity building beyond austerity measures alone.
  • Inequality and Privilege
    • Guild history shows privilege often hides behind quality control, safety claims requiring contestability mechanisms.
    • Counter is lower entry/diffusion costs so insiders’ rents bid down by capability, not pedigree.
    • Digital markets: pro-competitive procurement, open standards, limits on self-preferencing as modern analogues.
  • Technological Diffusion
    • Nick Crafts’ revisions show general purpose technologies (steam, ICT, AI) appear late in macro data.
    • Require complementary investments, firm reorganization for full impact realization taking considerable time historically.
    • Jared Diamond’s lens: technology embedded in landscapes, path dependencies reminding institutional embeddedness importance.

Conclusion

  • Mokyr’s quip feels true because prizes are lagging indicators; frontier problems are historical in essence.
  • Economic history’s comparative advantage: documents how societies learn to argue productively, build forums, rules.
  • History’s answer blunt: prosperity is exception; must be argued for institutionally and incessantly continuously.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top