STOCKHOLM,
Oct. 9 (Xinhua) -- U.S. economist Edmund S. Phelps won the 2006 Nobel Economics
Prize on Monday for improving the understanding of the trade-offs between
inflation and its effects on unemployment, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
announced.
The 73-year-old Columbia University professor's work
showed how low inflation today leads to expectations of low inflation in the
future, thereby influencing future policy decision making by corporate and
government leaders.
His work has "deepened our understanding of the
relation between short-run and long-run effects of economic policy" and has had
"a decisive impact on economic research as well as policy", the jury said.
"He has emphasized that not only the issue of savings
and capital formation but also the balance between inflation and unemployment
are fundamentally issues about the distribution of welfare over time," the Nobel
committee said.
In his research, Phelps suggested that in setting
prices and negotiating wages, employers and workers make judgments about future
inflation that in turn influence the inflation outcome.
"As a consequence, the long-run rate of unemployment
is not affected by inflation but only determined by the functioning of the labor
market," the academy said in its citation.
"Phelps's work has fundamentally altered our views on
how the macroeconomy operates," it added.
Phelps will take home the prize sum of 10 million
Swedish kronor (1.37 million U.S. dollars).
The Nobel Economics Prize, the fourth of the six
prizes to be awarded this year, is the only one not originally included in the
last will and testament of the creator of the awards, Swedish inventor Alfred
Nobel.
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US economist Edmund S. Phelps smiles after
receiving an Honoris Causa degree in economy at Rome's Tor Vergata
University in 2001. (Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo Gallery
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The
prize, which is known as the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in
Memory of Alfred Nobel, was created by the Swedish Central Bank in commemoration
of its tricentenary in 1968,and was first awarded in 1969. It is also funded by
the bank.
The prizes for Medicine, Physics and Chemistry were
awarded last week. The Literature Prize will be announced on Thursday and the
Peace Prize on Friday.
The Medicine Prize went to U.S. research duo Andrew
Fire and Craig Mello for their discovery of how to silence malfunctioning genes,
a breakthrough which could lead to an era of new therapies to reverse crippling
disease.
The Physics Prize went to U.S. space scientists John
Mather and George Smoot on Tuesday for a pioneering space mission which supports
the "Big Bang" theory about the origins of the universe.
Roger Kornberg of the United States won the Chemistry
Prize for work on a key process of life called genetic transcription, building
on Nobel prizewinning discoveries by his own father.
This year's Nobel prizes will be presented Dec. 10,
the anniversary of the death in 1896 of Alfred Nobel. The peace prize is awarded
in Oslo, Norway, and the other Nobel prizes are presented in Stockholm.
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