The
2020 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences was on Monday awarded to US economists
Paul R Milgrom and Robert B Wilson for their work on auction theory and
invention of new auction formats, benefitting sellers, buyers and taxpayers
around the world.
“The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
has decided to award the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory
of Alfred Nobel 2020 to Paul R Milgrom, Stanford University, US and Robert B
Wilson, Stanford University, US, for improvements to auction theory and
inventions of new auction formats”, the academy said in a statement. Their
theoretical discoveries have improved auctions in practice.
Paul Milgrom and Robert Wilson, have
studied how auctions work. They have also used their insights to design new
auction formats for goods and services that are difficult to sell in a
traditional way, such as radio frequencies. Their discoveries have benefitted
sellers, buyers and taxpayers around the world. Robert Wilson developed the
theory for auctions of objects with a common value – a value which is uncertain
beforehand but, in the end, is the same for everyone. Examples include the
future value of radio frequencies or the volume of minerals in a particular
area. He showed why rational bidders tend to place bids below their own best
estimate of the common value: they are worried about the winner’s curse – that
is, about paying too much and losing out.
Paul Milgrom formulated a more general
theory of auctions that not only allows common values, but also private values
that vary from bidder to bidder. He analyzed the bidding strategies in a number
of well-known auction formats, demonstrating that a format will give the seller
higher expected revenue when bidders learn more about each other’s estimated
values during bidding. "The duo of academics--Milgrom and Wilson--
invented new formats for auctioning off many interrelated objects
simultaneously, on behalf of a seller motivated by broad societal benefit
rather than maximal revenue. In 1994, the US authorities first used one of
their auction formats to sell radio frequencies to telecom operators. Since
then, many other countries have followed suit," the statement further
added. "This year’s Laureates in Economic Sciences started out with
fundamental theory and later used their results in practical applications,
which have spread globally. Their discoveries are of great benefit to the
society," Peter Fredriksson, chair of the Prize Committee said.
Born in 1948 in Detroit, Milgrom received
his doctorate in 1979 from Stanford University. He is a professor in the same
university. Wilson, born in 1937 in Geneva, US, educated from Harvard
University, Cambridge, US. Now, Mr Wilson is professor of Management at
Stanford University. According to a release, the prize money 10 million Swedish
kronor, will be shared equally between the Laureates. Last year,
Indian-American economist Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo, both of MIT, and
Michael Kremer of Harvard were honored for more than 20 years of economic
research to develop new ways to study and help in alleviating global
poverty.