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WASHINGTON DESK -
On Tuesday, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the Nobel Prize
in economic sciences together with $1.1 million to two economists who
will share the medal and the money.
The noted theorists
are from Columbia University in New York and Cambridge University at Oxford.
They studied how government and the private sector manipulate with incomplete
information and often fail to achieve government and private sector aims.
Working independently,
the noted eonomists developed theoretical solutions to economic planning
and forecasting difficulties.
For example,
Vickrey's economic calculations theorized possible methods for setting
subway fares and bridge tolls, and pricing electricity provided by public
utility companies. Following upon such speculative ideas, Vickrey went
on to recommend government policy on methods for conducting sealed Treasury
bonds auction sales.
On Tuesday,
following the announcement from Stockholm that Vickrey had been designated
for the Nobel Prize in economics, CNN carried a story that professor Vickrey
has attracted attention at Columbia University in New York for his humorous
and eccentric behavior.
For example,
Vickrey was reported as advising the Clinton administration to ignore
the $5.1 trillion National Debt, saying that if the U.S. were to balance
its budget and eliminate the National Debt, the nation's economy would
collapse.
Vickrey, the
CNN story said, advised the Clinton administration to increase spending
programs. The Los Angeles Times played a story on Wednesday that Vickrey
had proposed methods to be used by the Clinton administration for the
selling of band-spectrum licenses for tele-communications, including cellular
phones and the Internet.
Sources at
Columbia University told reporters on Tuesday that professor Vickrey is
an outstanding theoretical economist but he doesn't have a head for business
math. For example, sources said that Vickrey does not know the value of
money. 'He doesn't even know the amount of his own teaching salary.'
Ironically,
the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences credited the scholars with generating
'a better understanding' of an array of economic issues, including taxation,
insurance, credit markets and even how private sector organizations should
be structured and run from the top down.
Ironically,
the Academy praised Vickrey, saying he had provided a theoretical framework
for experts to think about such situations and apply the findings in such
everyday applications as drawing up contracts that protect the financial
interests of both parties.
In his lengthy
academic career, Vickrey, a naturalized U.S. citizen and a native of Victoria,
British Columbia, has pursued a variety of urban problems. On of his ideas
dealt with traffic congestion. It was his notion that government should
charge motorists a premium fee to use the roads during peak use-periods.
Vickrey rarely uses the public roads himself. He prefers to use the sidewalks
where his roller-skates speed him on his way to classes at Columbia.
Vickrey, was
a conscientious objector in World War II, when he performed alternative
service ostensibly designing a new inheritance tax scheme for Puerto Rico.
Told of his
Nobel Prize award on Tuesday, Vickrey said 'I'll try to make the most
of the opportunity to keep spreading some of my heretical ideas.'
Professor Mirrlees,
was the first to develop and solve a mathematical model of an economy
and the effects of income tax on it. Colleagues said Mirrlees' work is
fundamental to economists' modern understanding of the income tax. His
model is elementary to the modern analysis of complex information and
incentive problems. Mirrlees
worked on some of Vickrey's ideas a quarter of a century after they first
were made public, refining theories about the structure of an income tax.
Both of the
winners are credited with providing ways to consider such hard-to-measure
variables as incentive and capability in analyzing the economic activity
of the private and public sectors.
Howard Hobbs,
Ph.D.,chief economist at the Economics Institute and economics editor
of the Republican said on Tuesday he had written to Columbia University
and told them 'The Republican has followed the vital work and economic
theory of Nobel Laureate William Vickrey since the early 1950's ..."
Hobbs wrote
that "... during my graduate economics study in the California Legislature
under Ford Fellow Grant No. 5721. William Vickrey's theories first came
to our attention regarding taxation in his 1945 study ... on the opposing
utility of the factors of efficiency and equity in the redesign of federal
income taxation.'
Howard Hobbs
wrote 'In fact, I discussed the contrasting tax concepts of Efficiency
vs. Equity with Dick Nixon in Sacramento during a 1958 strategy session.
Later, during Nixon's first term as president, he took specific steps
to redesign the federal income tax structure.'
Hobbs concluded
'I know he [president Nixon] still had in his mind my conference with
him about the early work of professor Vickrey in that 1945 study; now
the basis for the 1996 Nobel Prize in economics ... Democratic capitalism
derives its incentives for social and economic competition and cooperation
entirely from situational availability and strategic uses of information.'
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