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The
work
in
microeconomic
theory
for
which
Oliver
Hart
and
Bengt
Holmström
have
received
this
year's
Economics
Nobel
Prize
goes
back
to
the
1970s
and
1980s
when
the
foundations
of
contract
theory
were
being
firmed
up.
Their
work
has
provided
economists
the
tools
to
understand
interactions
between
entities
in
a
range
of
fields,
such
as
the
design
of
performance
incentives
in
firms
and
schools,
corporate
governance,
privatisation,
constitutional
law,
and
entrepreneur-investor
relationships.
The
Royal
Swedish
Academy
of
Sciences
highlighted
that
their
contributions
to
understanding
'real-life
contracts
and
institutions,
as
well
as
the
pitfalls
when
designing
new
contracts'
were
crucial.
Mr.
Holmström,
in
1979,
published
a
theoretical
model
and
result
that
significantly
enhanced
the
understanding
of
risk
and
incentives
in
employer-employee
relationships.
This
was
called
the
informativeness
principle,
which
said
performance
should
be
linked
to
all
variables
or
outcomes
that
provide
information
on
the
actions
taken
by
an
agent,
such
as
a
firm's
manager,
and
not
just
the
outcomes
she
can
effect.
Remunerating
a
manager
based
on
just
the
share
price
of
her
firm
will
reward
and
punish
her
for
factors
beyond
her
control,
and
a
better
contract
would
therefore
link
managerial
compensation
to
the
firm's
share
price
relative
to
the
share
prices
of
other
comparable
firms.
Mr.
Hart's
key
contribution
to
contract
theory
has
been
the
notion
of
incomplete
contracts.
Not
all
information
is
available
ex
ante;
how
does
a
contract
allow
principals
(such
as
employers)
and
agents
(such
as
employees)
to
negotiate
unforeseen
situations?
The
work
by
Mr.
Hart
and
his
colleagues
in
this
area
was
cited
by
the
Academy
for
its
breakthrough
nature.
The
Economics
Nobel
raises
larger
questions
given
the
high-profile
nature
of
the
subject
and
the
fact
that
it
is
the
only
social
science
for
which
a
prize
is
awarded.
Analysis
from
The
Economist
and
the
Nobel
organisation
shows
that
of
the
77
laureates
who
shared
the
48
economics
prizes
awarded
between
1969
and
2016,
all
of
38
were
U.S.
residents
and
10
were
British.
Economic
historians
Avner
Offer
and
Gabriel
Söderberg
recently
pointed
out
that
while
the
prize
may
not
have
a
significant
liberal
or
conservative
bias,
only
one
person
has
been
awarded
a
prize
for
‘social
democracy'
—
how
governments
provide
for
their
people
—
as
opposed
to
‘hard
economics'
despite
social
democratic
principles
governing
how
30
per
cent
of
GDP
is
allocated
in
developed
countries.
Why
this
has
happened
is
perhaps
less
important
than
pointing
out
that
it
has
happened,
so
there
is
an
awareness
of
what
the
economics
prize
is,
and
what
it
is
not.
The
work
in
microeconomic
theory
for
which
Oliver
Hart
and
Bengt
Holmström
have
received
this
year's
Economics
Nobel
Prize
goes
back
to
the
1970s
and
1980s
when