List of Clarivate Citation laureates in Economic Sciences
The following is a list of Clarivate Citation Laureates considered likely to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.[1] Since 2024, twenty-six of the 113 citation laureates selected starting in 2002 have eventually been awarded a Nobel Prize: Daniel Kahneman (2002), Robert F. Engle and Clive Granger (2003), Paul Krugman (2008), Oliver E. Williamson (2009), Thomas J. Sargent and Christopher A. Sims (2011), Eugene Fama, Lars Peter Hansen and Robert J. Shiller (2013), Jean Tirole (2014), Angus Deaton (2015), Oliver Hart and Bengt Holmström (2016), Richard Thaler (2017), Paul Romer and William Nordhaus (2018), Robert B. Wilson and Paul Milgrom (2020), Joshua Angrist and David Card (2021), Douglas Diamond (2022), Claudia Goldin (2023), Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James A. Robinson (2024).
Laureates
[edit]Citation Laureates | Nationality | Motivations | Institute | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002–2005[2] | ||||
![]() 2003 |
Robert F. Engle (born 1942) |
![]() |
"for contributions on econometrics, particularly on time series, Autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (ARCH) and cointegration." | University of California, San Diego |
![]() 2003 |
Clive Granger (1934–2009) |
![]() |
University of California, San Diego | |
![]() 2002 |
Daniel Kahneman (1934–2024) |
![]() ![]() |
"for pioneering research on behavioral economics, particularly on the psychology of judgment and decision-making." | Princeton University University of British Columbia |
Robert Barro (born 1944) |
![]() |
"for contributions on developing new classical macroeconomics." | Harvard University | |
![]() 2013 |
Eugene Fama (born 1939) |
![]() |
"for contributions on financial economics, especially on developing the Fama–French three-factor model." | University of Chicago |
Kenneth French (born 1954) |
![]() |
Dartmouth College | ||
![]() 2018 |
Paul Romer (born 1955) |
![]() |
"for contributions in endogenous growth theory." | New York University |
![]() 2017 |
Richard Thaler (born 1945) |
![]() |
"for contributions to behavioral economics, behavioral finance and nudge theory." | Cornell University University of Chicago |
2006[2] | ||||
![]() 2008 |
Paul Krugman (born 1953) |
![]() |
"for research on the effects of economies of scale and of consumer preferences for diverse goods, and the services in international trade and the geographic distribution of economic activity." | Princeton University |
Jagdish Bhagwati (born 1934) |
![]() ![]() |
"for their significant contributions to international trade theory and economic development." | Columbia University | |
Avinash Dixit (born 1944) |
![]() ![]() |
Princeton University | ||
Dale W. Jorgenson (1933–2022) |
![]() |
"for research on the relationship between productivity and economic growth, the economics of climate change, and the intersection between economics and statistics." | Harvard University | |
![]() 2016 |
Oliver Hart (born 1948) |
![]() ![]() |
"for research studies on corporate governance, theory of the firm and corporate finance." | Harvard University |
![]() 2016 |
Bengt Holmström (born 1949) |
![]() |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
![]() 2009 |
Oliver E. Williamson (1932–2020) |
![]() |
University of Pennsylvania University of California, Berkeley | |
2007[2] | ||||
Elhanan Helpman (born 1946) |
![]() |
"for contributions on international trade, particularly on the relationship between economic growth and trade and the political economy of trade policy." | Harvard University Tel Aviv University | |
Gene Grossman (born 1955) |
![]() |
Princeton University | ||
![]() 2014 |
Jean Tirole (born 1953) |
![]() |
"for significant contributions in understanding the economic impact of industrial organization." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology Toulouse School of Economics |
![]() 2020 |
Robert B. Wilson (born 1937) |
![]() |
"for furthering the role of game theory in industrial organization and developing new auction formats." | Stanford University |
![]() 2020 |
Paul Milgrom (born 1948) |
![]() |
Stanford University | |
2008[3] | ||||
![]() 2013 |
Lars Peter Hansen (born 1952) |
![]() |
"for their contributions to dynamic econometric models." | University of Chicago |
![]() 2011 |
Thomas J. Sargent (born 1943) |
![]() |
||
![]() 2011 |
Christopher A. Sims (born 1942) |
![]() |
Princeton University | |
Armen Alchian (1914–2013) |
![]() |
"for their publications on property rights and their contributions to the theory of the firm." | University of California, Los Angeles | |
Harold Demsetz (1930–2019) |
![]() | |||
Martin Feldstein (1939–2019) |
![]() |
"for his research on public economics, including taxation, social security, health economics and many other topics." | ||
2009[4] | ||||
Ernst Fehr (born 1956) |
![]() ![]() |
"for their contributions to behavioral economics, including issues of preferences, fairness, and cooperation." | University of Zürich | |
Matthew Rabin (born 1963) |
![]() |
Harvard Business School | ||
![]() 2018 |
William Nordhaus (born 1941) |
![]() |
"for their contributions to environmental economics, particularly with respect to climate change." | Yale University |
Martin Weitzman (1942–2019) |
![]() |
Harvard University | ||
John B. Taylor (born 1946) |
![]() |
"for their research on monetary policy." | ||
Jordi Galí (born 1961) |
![]() |
|||
Mark Gertler (born 1951) |
![]() |
New York University | ||
2010[5] | ||||
Alberto Alesina (1957–2020) |
![]() |
"for theoretical and empirical studies on the relationship between politics and macroeconomics, and specifically for research on politico-economic cycles." | Harvard University | |
Nobuhiro Kiyotaki (born 1955) |
![]() |
"for formulation of the Kiyotaki–Moore model, which describes how small shocks to an economy may lead to a cycle of lower output resulting from a decline in collateral values that create a restrictive credit environment." | Princeton University | |
John H. Moore (born 1954) |
![]() |
|||
Kevin M. Murphy (born 1958) |
![]() |
"for pioneering empirical research in social economics, including wage inequality and labor demand, unemployment, addiction, and the economic return on investment in medical research among other topics." | ||
2011[6] | ||||
![]() 2022 |
Douglas Diamond (born 1953) |
![]() |
"for his analysis of financial intermediation and monitoring." | University of Chicago |
Anne Osborn Krueger (born 1934) |
![]() |
"for their description of rent-seeking behavior and its implications." | Johns Hopkins University | |
Gordon Tullock (1922–2014) |
![]() |
George Mason University School of Law | ||
Jerry A. Hausman (born 1946) |
![]() |
"for their contributions to econometrics, specifically the Hausman specification test and the White standard errors test." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
Halbert White (1950–2012) |
![]() |
University of California, San Diego | ||
2012[7] | ||||
Tony Atkinson (1944–2017) |
![]() |
"for empirical research on consumption, income and savings, poverty and health, and well-being." | Oxford University | |
![]() 2015 |
Angus Deaton (born 1945) |
![]() |
Princeton University | |
Stephen Ross (1944–2017) |
![]() |
"for his arbitrage pricing theory and other fundamental contributions to finance." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology | |
![]() 2013 |
Robert J. Shiller (born 1946) |
![]() |
"for pioneering contributions to financial market volatility and the dynamics of asset prices." | Yale University |
2013[8] | ||||
![]() 2021 |
Joshua Angrist (born 1960) |
![]() ![]() |
"for their advancement of empirical microeconomics." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
![]() 2021 |
David Card (born 1956) |
![]() ![]() |
University of California, Berkeley | |
Alan Krueger (1960–2019) |
![]() |
Princeton University | ||
David Forbes Hendry (born 1944) |
![]() |
"for their contributions to economic time-series, including modeling, testing and forecasting." | University of Oxford | |
M. Hashem Pesaran (born 1946) |
![]() ![]() |
|||
Peter C. B. Phillips (born 1948) |
![]() |
Yale University | ||
Sam Peltzman (born 1940) |
![]() |
"for extending economic theories of regulation." | University of Chicago Booth School of Business | |
Richard Posner (born 1939) |
![]() |
University of Chicago Law School | ||
2014[9] | ||||
Philippe Aghion (born 1956) |
![]() |
"for contributions to Schumpeterian growth theory." | Harvard University | |
Peter Howitt (born 1946) |
![]() |
Brown University | ||
William Baumol (1922–2017) |
![]() |
"for their advancement of the study of entrepreneurism." | New York University | |
Israel M. Kirzner (born 1930) |
![]() | |||
Mark Granovetter (born 1943) |
![]() |
"for his pioneering research in economic sociology." | Stanford University | |
2015[10] | ||||
Richard Blundell (born 1952) |
![]() |
"for microeconometric research on labor markets and consumer behavior." | ||
John A. List (born 1968) |
![]() |
"for advancing field experiments in economics." | University of Chicago | |
Charles F. Manski (born 1948) |
![]() |
"for his description of partial identification and economic analysis of social interactions." | Northwestern University | |
2016[11] | ||||
Olivier Blanchard (born 1948) |
![]() |
"for contributions to macroeconomics, including determinants of economic fluctuations and employment." | ||
Edward Lazear (1948–2020) |
![]() |
"for his development of the distinctive field of personnel economics." | ||
Marc Melitz (born 1968) |
![]() |
"for pioneering descriptions of firm heterogeneity and international trade." | Harvard University | |
2017[12] | ||||
Colin Camerer (born 1959) |
![]() |
"for pioneering research in behavioral economics and in neuroeconomics." | California Institute of Technology | |
George Loewenstein (born 1955) |
![]() |
Carnegie Mellon University | ||
Robert Hall (born 1943) |
![]() |
"for his analysis of worker productivity and studies of recessions and unemployment." | Stanford University | |
Michael C. Jensen (born 1939) |
![]() |
"for their contributions illuminating the dimensions of decisions in corporate finance." | Harvard University | |
Stewart Myers (born 1940) |
![]() |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology | ||
Raghuram Rajan (born 1963) |
![]() |
University of Chicago | ||
2018[13] | ||||
Manuel Arellano (born 1957) |
![]() |
"for contributions to panel data analysis, especially the Arellano–Bond estimator." | Center for Monetary and Financial Studies | |
Steve Bond (born 1963) |
![]() |
Oxford University | ||
Wesley M. Cohen (born 1950) |
![]() |
"for the introduction and development of the concept of absorptive capacity and its contribution to our understanding of technological innovation." | Duke University | |
Daniel A. Levinthal (born 1957) |
![]() |
University of Pennsylvania | ||
David M. Kreps (born 1950) |
![]() |
"for contributions to dynamic economic phenomena." | Stanford University | |
2019[14] | ||||
W. Brian Arthur (born 1946) |
![]() |
"for research exploring the consequences of increasing returns (or network effects) in economic systems." | ||
Ariel Rubinstein (born 1951) |
![]() |
"for development of formal theoretical economic models and especially models of bounded rationality." | New York University | |
Søren Johansen (born 1939) |
![]() |
"for contributions to econometrics and cointegration analysis." | University of Copenhagen | |
Katarina Juselius-Johansen (born 1943) |
![]() ![]() | |||
2020[15] | ||||
David Dickey (born 1945) |
![]() |
"for the statistical tests of a unit root in time-series analysis (Dickey and Fuller) and the statistical analysis of non-stationary time series (Perron)." | North Carolina State University | |
Wayne Fuller (born 1931) |
![]() |
Iowa State University | ||
Pierre Perron (born 1959) |
![]() |
Boston University | ||
![]() 2023 |
Claudia Goldin (born 1946) |
![]() |
"for contributions to labor economics, especially her analysis of women and the gender pay gap." | Harvard University |
Steven T. Berry (born 1959) |
![]() |
"for their BLP random coefficients logit model for demand estimation." | Yale University | |
James A. Levinsohn (born 1958) |
![]() | |||
Ariél Pakes (born 1949) |
![]() ![]() |
Harvard University | ||
2021[16] | ||||
David B. Audretsch (born 1954) |
![]() |
"for ioneering research on entrepreneurship, innovation, and competition." | Indiana University | |
David Teece (born 1948) |
![]() ![]() |
University of California, Berkeley | ||
Joel Mokyr (born 1946) |
![]() ![]() |
"for studies of the history and culture of technological progress and its economic consequences." | Northwestern University | |
Carmen Reinhart (born 1955) |
![]() ![]() |
"for contributions to international macroeconomics and insights on global debt and financial crises." | Harvard Kennedy School | |
Kenneth Rogoff (born 1953) |
![]() |
Harvard University | ||
2022[17] | ||||
![]() 2024 |
Daron Acemoglu (born 1967) |
![]() ![]() |
"for far-reaching analysis of the role of political and economic institutions in shaping national development." | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
![]() 2024 |
Simon Johnson (born 1963) |
![]() ![]() | ||
![]() 2024 |
James A. Robinson (born 1960) |
![]() |
University of Chicago | |
Samuel Bowles (born 1939) |
![]() |
"for providing evidence and models that broaden our understanding of economic behavior to include not only self interest but also reciprocity, altruism, and other forms of social cooperation." | ||
Herbert Gintis (1940–2023) |
![]() | |||
Richard Easterlin (1926–2024) |
![]() |
"for pioneering contributions to the economics of happiness and subjective well-being." | University of Southern California | |
Richard Layard (born 1934) |
![]() |
London School of Economics | ||
Andrew Oswald (born 1953) |
![]() |
University of Warwick | ||
2023[18] | ||||
Raj Chetty (born 1979) |
![]() ![]() |
"for understanding the determinants of economic opportunity and identifying policies to increase social mobility." | Harvard University | |
Edward Glaeser (born 1967) |
![]() |
"for penetrating analysis and insights on urban economics and the city as an engine of growth." | Harvard University | |
Thomas Piketty (born 1971) |
![]() |
"for research on income and wealth inequality and its consequences." | Paris School of Economics | |
Emmanuel Saez (born 1972) |
![]() ![]() |
University of California, Berkeley | ||
Gabriel Zucman (born 1986) |
![]() |
Paris School of Economics École Normale Supérieure | ||
2024[19] | ||||
Janet Currie (born 1957) |
![]() ![]() |
"for pioneering economic analysis of child development." | Princeton University | |
Partha Dasgupta (born 1942) |
![]() ![]() |
"for integrating nature and its resources in the human economy." | University of Cambridge | |
Paolo Mauro (born ?) |
![]() |
"for empirical studies of the effects of corruption on investment and economic growth." | International Finance Corporation |
References
[edit]- ^ "Acquisition of the Thomson Reuters Intellectual Property and Science Business by Onex and Baring Asia Completed". PR Newswire. October 3, 2016.
- ^ a b c "Thomas Reuters, Research Service Group, 2002–2009" (PDF). Clarivate Analytics.
- ^ "The Scientific Business of Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. October 3, 2008.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. September 24, 2009.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. September 21, 2010.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts Nobel Laureates". ACN Newswire (Press release). September 21, 2011.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts 2012 Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. September 19, 2012.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts 2013 Nobel Laureates". PR Newswire. September 25, 2013.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Predicts 2014 Nobel Laureates, Researchers Forecast for Nobel Recognition". PR Newswire. September 25, 2014.
- ^ "Thomson Reuters Forecasts Nobel Prize Winners". PR Newswire. September 24, 2015.
- ^ "Web of Science Predicts 2016 Nobel Prize Winners". PR Newswire. September 21, 2016.
- ^ "The 2017 Clarivate Citation Laureates". Clarivate Analytics. September 20, 2017. Archived from the original on September 20, 2017.
- ^ "The 2018 Clarivate Citation Laureates" (PDF). Clarivate Analytics. September 20, 2018.
- ^ "The 2019 Clarivate Citation Laureates" (PDF). Clarivate Analytics. September 24, 2019.
- ^ "Clarivate Reveals 2020 Citation Laureates – Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". PR Newswire. September 23, 2020.
- ^ "Clarivate Unveils Citation Laureates 2021 – Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". PR Newswire. September 22, 2021.
- ^ "Clarivate Reveals Citation Laureates 2022 – Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". PR Newswire. September 21, 2022.
- ^ "Clarivate Unveils Citation Laureates 2023 – Annual List of Researchers of Nobel Class". Clarivate Analytics. September 19, 2023.
- ^ "Clarivate Reveals Citation Laureates 2024". PR Newswire. September 19, 2024.