Roger Myerson
(1951 - )
Roger Bruce Myerson is an American
economist and co-winner, with Leonid
Hurwicz and Eric
Maskin, of the 2007 Nobel
Prize in Economics “for having laid the foundations
of mechanism design theory.”
Roger Myerson is the Glen A. Lloyd Distinguished
Service Professor of Economics at the University
of Chicago. He was born in 1951 to a Jewish
family and attended Harvard University, where
he received his A.B. and S.M. (1973), and
Ph.D. (1976), all in applied mathematics.
From 1976 to 2001, he was a professor of
economics at Northwestern University’s
Kellogg School of Management.
The following press release
from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
describes Myerson’s work:
Adam Smith's classical
metaphor of the invisible hand refers to
how the market, under ideal conditions,
ensures an efficient allocation of scarce
resources. But in practice conditions are
usually not ideal; for example, competition
is not completely free, consumers are not
perfectly informed and privately desirable
production and consumption may generate
social costs and benefits. Furthermore,
many transactions do not take place in
open markets but within firms, in bargaining
between individuals or interest groups
and under a host of other institutional
arrangements. How well do different such
institutions, or allocation mechanisms,
perform? What is the optimal mechanism
to reach a certain goal, such as social
welfare or private profit? Is government
regulation called for, and if so, how is
it best designed?
These questions are difficult,
particularly since information about individual
preferences and available production technologies
is usually dispersed among many actors
who may use their private information to
further their own interests. Mechanism
design theory, initiated by Leonid Hurwicz
and further developed by Eric Maskin and
Roger Myerson, has greatly enhanced our
understanding of the properties of optimal
allocation mechanisms in such situations,
accounting for individuals' incentives
and private information. The theory allows
us to distinguish situations in which markets
work well from those in which they do not.
It has helped economists identify efficient
trading mechanisms, regulation schemes
and voting procedures. Today, mechanism
design theory plays a central role in many
areas of economics and parts of political
science.
Sources: Wikipedia |