from the Econospeak blog, by James Madison U's Barkley Rosser:

Why I Forecast that Krugman Would Not Get the Economics Nobel Prize

So, I accurately put international trade first as a field to get the
Nobel this year and also forecast accurately that the prediction
markets would be wrong. However, I said the trade prize would be to
Bhagwati and Dixit with a third, but not Krugman. I was clearly very
wrong on that. Why was I wrong about Jim Devine's former roommate?

Well, they have said that they gave it to him for applying his ideas
to both international trade and location theory, and I must give him
credit on that. The last person to get one for international trade did
so also, the Swede, Bertil Ohlin, whose most famous book was
_International and Interregional Trade_. I should have seen that one
coming. He applied the Dixit-Stiglitz model to both fields to develop
the respective "new trade theory" and "new economic geography."

So, why did I forecast he would not get it? Because he was not the
first to apply that theory to those areas. For that matter, he did not
invent the idea. Stiglitz and Dixit did. Now Stiglitz got his prize
for asymmetric information, but Dixit has not gotten one, and it was
for this paper that I had him on my list for a trade prize. This
reminds me of Robert Lucas getting the prize for applying rational
expectations to macroeconomics, while the inventor of the idea, John
Muth, has to this day not gotten one.

As for applying, there were others, such as Elhanann Helpmann, who
applied the D-S model to trade (Krugman always cited his and others
work on this, although he took it much further than they did). As for
applying it to location theory, that was first done by Masahisa Fujita
of Japan, whom Krugman also cited. But it was Krugman who did it in
both places and pushed the application far. That is why he got it.

Now, I have been on record harshly criticizing him regarding some of
this, in particular in my review of his book, _Development, Geography,
and Economic Theory_, which appeared in JEBO in 1996. In particular I
was annoyed that he put himself forward as the first (except for
Fujita, with whom he would later coauthor) to provide a mathematically
rigorous explanation of agglomeration economies. Now D-S does this but
on the basis of consumers liking a variety of goods, not on production
efficiencies, which is what most observers think is what is really
going on. However, there had been a long literature during the 1980s
by non-economists in non-economics journals in fact developing
mathematical models of regional dynamics with agglomeration economies
(examples, the physicist Peter Allen, a student of Ilya Prigogine at
the Free University of Brussels, and Wolfgang Weidlich of the
Stuttgarth Institute of Theoretical Physics). Krugman never cited any
of this work, and, frankly, this pissed me off.

Now, I must admit something important: I do not know for sure that
Paul Krugman ever read any of that literature. It is possible he did
not. Even if he did, he could defend himself on the grounds that
although these models are mathematical, they were not drawn on
neoclassical economic theory in a standard way. Dixit-Stiglitz is.

Now, I know that most readers here are probably cheering the award
because of Krugman's long opposition to Bush's policies from his perch
at the NY Times. I must give him credit for pointing out problems in
Bush's policies at times when he was popular and few others were in
the media. I also think he is a very brilliant and innovative guy, and
I have long said that he probably eventually deserved a Nobel for his
work on foreign exchange rate models.

While I think his excellent current commentaries on the current
financial crisis may have played a role in his getting the prize, I do
not think his criticisms of Bush did much, although commentators over
on Marginal Revolution are frothing at the mouth over the award,
saying it is "political." I would note that one of last year's
winners, Hurwicz, was a student of Hayek, and the previous year's
winners, Kydland and Prescott, were open supporters of Bush and his
policies, especially Prescott who followed his award by writing a very
stupid column in the Wall Street Journal praising Bush's fiscal
policies and calling for more supply side tax cuts.

So, anyway, I am not against Krugman getting the award. He is indeed
brilliant, and his applying the D-S model to both trade and location
theory was very innovative. Congratulations to him.

-- 
Jim Devine /  "Nobody told me there'd be days like these / Strange
days indeed -- most peculiar, mama." -- JL.
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