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The Hicks-Tinbergen Award is a biennial prize in economics awarded by the European Economic Association (EEA) to the author(s) of the best article published in the EEA's journal within the two preceding years. The Hicks-Tinbergen Award was created in 1991 and is named in honour of the Dutch econometrician Jan Tinbergen and the British economist John Hicks to show that the EEA supports both theoretical and empirical economic research in Europe. Until 2002, the journal of the EEA was the European Economic Review, which was subsequently replaced by the Journal of the European Economic Association. The Hicks-Tinbergen Award is generally awarded at the EEA's Annual Congress, after a committee of three economists has selected the winner among the nominations submitted by EEA members.[1]
Past Recipients
editA complete list of the past recipients of the Hicks-Tinbergen Award can be found on the website of the EEA.[2]
Year | Recipients | Publication |
---|---|---|
1992 | Anton Barten and L.J. Bettendorf | Price formation for fish: An application of an inverse demand function |
1994 | Robert Innesq and Richard Sexton | Customer coalitions, monopoly price discrimination and generic entry deterrence |
1996 | Jan van Ours and Geert Ridder | Job matching and job competition: Are lower educated workers at the back of job queues? |
1998 | Laura Bottazzi, Paolo Pesenti and Eric van Wincoop | Wages, profits and the international portfolio puzzle |
2000 | Ernst Fehr, Georg Kirchsteiger and Arno Riedl | Gift exchange and reciprocity in competitive experimental markets |
2002 | Juan Carrillo and Thomas Mariotti | Electoral competition and politician turnover |
2004 | Frank Smets and Raf Wouters | An estimated dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model of the Euro Area |
2006 | Gary Gorton and Frank A. Schmid | Capital, labor and the firm: A study of German codetermination |
2008 | Botond Köszegy | Ego utility, overconfidence, and task choice |
2010 | Denis Fougère, Francis Kramarz and Julien Pouget | Youth unemployment and crime in France |
2012 | Guido Tabellini | Culture and institutions: Economic development in the regions of Europe |
2014 | Amy Finkelstein, Enzo Luttmer and Matthew Notowidigdo | What good is wealth without health? The effect of health on the marginal utility of consumption |
2016 | Riccardo Puglisi and James Snyder | The Balanced US Press |
2018 | Luigi Griso, Paola Sapienza and Luigi Zingales | Long-term persistence |
2020 | Jose Asturias, Manuel García-Santana and Roberto Ramos Magdaleno | Competition and the Welfare Gains from Transportation Infrastructure: Evidence from the Golden Quadrilateral in India |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Profile of the Hicks-Tinbergen Award on the website of the EEA. Retrieved March 27th, 2018.
- ^ "List of past winners of the Hicks-Tinbergen Award (status: 2016). Retrieved March 27th, 2018" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-03-27. Retrieved 2018-03-27.