The Nobel For Economics Goes To...

Richard Thaler "is a pioneer in behavioural economics", said Swedish Academy of Sciences.

Stockholm: The Nobel economics prize has been awarded to Richard Thaler of the University of Chicago for his contributions to behavioural economics.

The 9-million-kronor (USD 1.1-million) prize was awarded to the academic for his "understanding of the psychology of economics," Swedish Academy of Sciences secretary Goeran
Hansson said on Monday.

The Nobel committee said Thaler's work shows how human traits affect individual decisions as well as market outcomes.

Thaler, 72, "is a pioneer in behavioural economics, a research field in which insights from psychological research are applied to economic decision making," a background paper
from the academy said.

That "incorporates more realistic analysis of how people think and behave when making economic decisions," it said.

The economics prize is something of an outlier, Alfred Nobel's will didn't call for its establishment and it honours a science that many doubt is a science at all.

The Sveriges Riksbank (Swedish National Bank) Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel was first awarded in 1969, nearly seven decades after the series of prestigious prizes that Nobel called for.

Despite its provenance and carefully laborious name, it is broadly considered an equal to the other Nobel and the winner attends the famed presentation banquet.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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