I Really Want Paul Romer to Win the Nobel Prize in Economics
It is Nobel Prize award time. I watch these announcements like some people watch the red carpet at Oscar time. The prizes for Chemistry were awarded today. The last award will be for the discipline closest to my heart: economics. That means that it is time for my yearly plea to the Nobel Committee to name one of my favorite economists for the prize. His best shot was in 2016, but I keep hoping.
Paul Romer is a deserving
genius. Here is a gentleman who looks continuously
at the human condition and tries to make it better by making it more
understandable. He does it with numbers,
cosmic thinking and tenacious research.
He embodies everything I love about economics.
Romer
is the son of former Colorado Governor, Roy Romer. He has an undergraduate degree in physics and
a doctorate in economics. He and I are
probably not hitting for the same political team, but that doesn’t matter. He is intelligent, hard working and plays by
the rules. That is all I ask from
anyone. This man speaks my language.
Since
Romer started as a physicist he probably has heard that no one could explain
Albert Einstein’s theories better than Einstein himself. Likewise, no one explains Romer’s economics
better than Romer. He talks about how
societies can increase production and economic growth. This is certainly the action needed to
restore job growth, economic stability and the preeminent position of the United States
in the global community. Romer’s work
starts with the contention that societies continuously rearrange their finite
resources to produce more and better products.
He compares this to how people work in a kitchen. I like to use the example of the woman who
only has three eggs in the house on a snowbound winter morning, she may not
have enough to make scrambled eggs for the whole family, but she can use one
egg to make pancakes and have plenty of food to feed the troops. It is a matter of choices.
Romer describes how productivity transfers
to increased income. To figure the
doubling rate of anything, simply divide 72 by the rate of change. Quoting Romer’s own example, India doubles
its income every 40 years. China’s income
doubles every 12 years. Our doubling
rate is every 31 years. It becomes easy
to see why China is a
burgeoning economy, why India’s
is stagnant, and which direction our country is trending. By asking why these rates are different we
come up with a very human element in the equation—the human capacity for ideas.
It is true that America is blessed with a wide
palette of resources, but so are other countries which have failed to use them
productively up to this point. There are
also many small countries with limited resources that have become economic
powers—think Switzerland and
Taiwan. Romer presents mathematical models and a
compelling narrative to show how ideas have made the difference
between successful and failed countries.
Investing in human capital (healthy, educated, work oriented people) and
doing nothing to interfere with their exchange and adaption of ideas can
produce growth in an economy. In
addition, he advocates putting incentives in place for privately held ideas to
be put to work within the borders of the country, enriching everyone.
Government rules should encourage
entrepreneurship, not inhibit it. Romer
is not opposed to governmental regulation, but believes it should never be
designed to extend the status quo. Romer
is quick to point out the problems that can come from too much governmental
tampering with the machinery of production.
He is just as quick to point out that governmental support for education
and training benefits the private enterprises that produce growth.
To Romer, the solutions lie in each of
us. Governments should provide rich
environments for their citizens to grow production, and then step back. I don’t know if Paul Romer will get the Nobel
Prize this year, but I think he should.
Promote genius and keep the faith.
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