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Presentation Speech - The Sveriges Riksbank (Bank
of Sweden) Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel
KUNGL. VETENSKAPSAKADEMIEN THE ROYAL SWEDISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
8
October 1996
The
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Bank
of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel,
1996, to
Professor
James A. Mirrlees, University of Cambridge, U.K. and
Professor William Vickrey, Columbia University, New York,
USA,
(deceased October 10, 1996)
for
their fundamental contributions to the economic theory of incentives
under asymmetric information.
Information
and Incentives
One
of the most important and liveliest areas of economic research in
recent years addresses situations where decision-makers have
different information. Such informational asymmetries occur
in a great many contexts. For example, a bank does not have complete
information about borrowers' future income; the owners of a firm may
not have the same detailed information about costs and competitive
conditions as the managing director; an insurance company cannot
fully observe policyholders' responsibility for insured property and
external events which affect the risk of damage; an auctioneer does
not have complete information about the willingness to pay of
potential buyers; the government has to devise an income tax system
without much knowledge about the productivity of individual
citizens; etc.
Incomplete
and asymmetrically distributed information has fundamental
consequences, particularly in the sense that an informational
advantage can often be exploited strategically. Research on the
economics of information has therefore focused on the question of
how contracts and institutions can be designed to handle different
incentive and control problems. This has generated a better
understanding of insurance markets, credit markets, auctions, the
internal organization of firms, wage forms, tax systems, social
insurance, competitive conditions, political institutions, etc.
This
year's laureates have laid the foundation for examining these
seemingly quite disparate areas through their analytical work on
issues where informational asymmetries are a key component. An
essential part of William Vickrey's research has concerned
the properties of different types of auctions, and how they
can best be designed so as to generate economic efficiency. His
endeavors have provided the basis for a lively field of research
which, more recently, has also been extended to practical
applications such as auctions of treasury bonds and band spectrum
licenses. In the late 1940s, Vickrey also formulated a model
indicating how income taxation can be designed to attain a balance
between efficiency and equity. A quarter of a century later,
interest in this model was renewed when James Mirrlees found
a more thorough solution to the problems associated with optimal
income taxes. Mirrlees soon realized that his method could also
be applied to many other similar problems. It has become a principal
constituent of the modern analysis of complex information and
incentive problems. Mirrlees's approach has become particularly
valuable in situations where it is impossible to observe another
agent's actions, so-called moral hazard.
Income
Taxation
Philosophers,
economists and political scientists have studied the principles of
income taxation for a long time. Different principles of justice
have governed the structure of taxation. In a classical essay
published in 1897, Oxford professor Francis Y. Edgeworth adopted a
utilitarian welfare perspective; he concluded that all differences
in income should be neutralized, which requires strongly progressive
tax rates. Vickrey's analysis, in the mid-1940s, emphasized that a
progressive tax schedule would affect individuals' incentives to
exert themselves. He therefore reformulated the problem with respect
to both incentive problems - that each individual takes the tax
schedule into account when choosing his work effort - and asymmetric
information - that, in practice, the productivity of individuals is
not known to the government. He formulated a solution to the problem
in principle, but did not succeed in mastering its mathematical
complications.
It
was not until 25 years later that the problem was reconsidered by
James Mirrlees, who solved it in a way which has established a
paradigm for analyzing a broad spectrum of economic issues where
asymmetric information is a prime component. Mirrlees identified a
critical condition (known as single crossing) which
drastically simplifies the problem and enables a solution. His
analysis also proved to contain the germ of a general principle: the
revelation principle. According to this principle, the
solution to incentive problems under incomplete information belongs
to the relatively limited class of so-called allocation mechanisms
which induce all individuals to reveal their privat information
truthfully, in a way which does not conflict with their
self-interest. By applying this principle, it becomes much easier to
design optimal contracts and other solutions to incentive problems.
It has therefore had a large bearing on the treatment of many issues
of economic theory.
Moral
Hazard
For
a long time, a well-known problem in connection with insurance is
that damage to insured objects depends not only on external factors
such as weather and attempted theft, but also on the care taken by
the policyholder, which is costly for an insurance company to
monitor. Corresponding problems also arise regarding different kinds
of social insurance, such as health and disability insurance.
Generous insurance coverage can exaggerate risktaking and affect the
way individuals care for themselves and their property. Many other
two-party relations involve an outcome that is observable to both
parties, where the outcome depends on one party's (the agent's)
actions, which cannot be observed by the other party (the
principal), as well as on a random variable. In the relation between
the owner and the management of a firm, for instance, the action
would be the executive's work effort, the outcome would be the
firm's profit and the random variable could be the firm's market or
production conditions. The owners of both the insurance company and
the firm want to choose terms of compensation, a
"contract", which gives the agent incentives to act in
accordance with the principal's interests, for example, by
maximizing the owner's expected profits.
The
technical difficulties encountered in analyzing these so-called moral
hazard problems are similar to the income tax problems
emphasized by Vickrey and solved by Mirrlees. In the mid-1970s, by
means of an apparently simple reformulation of the problem, Mirrlees
paved the way for an increasingly powerful analysis. He noted that
an agent's actions indirectly imply a choice of the probabilities
that different outcomes will occur. The conditions for the optimal
terms of compensation thus provide "probability
information" about the agent's choice and the extent to which
insurance protection has to be restricted in order to provide the
agent with suitable incentives. In designing an incentive scheme,
the principal has to take into account the costs of giving the agent
incentives to act in accordance with the principal's interests. The
higher the agent's sensitivity to punishment and the larger the
amount of information about the agent's choice contained in the
outcome, the lower these costs. This is stipulated in a contract;
the agent bears part of the cost of undesirable outcomes or receives
part of the profits from favorable outcomes. The policyholder takes
care of the insured object almost as if it were uninsured, and the
executive manages the firm almost as if it were his own.
Auctions
Asymmetric
information is also an essential component of auctions, where
potential buyers have limited knowledge about the value of the asset
or rights up for sale. Vickrey analyzed the properties of different
kinds of auctions in two papers in 1961 and 1962. He attached
particular importance to the second-price auction or, as it is now
often called, the Vickrey auction. In such an auction, an object is
auctioned off in sealed bidding, where the highest bidder gets to
buy the item, but only pays the next highest price offered. This is
an example of a mechanism which elicits an individual's true
willingness to pay. By bidding above his own willingness to pay, an
individual runs the risk that someone else will bid likewise, and he
is forced to buy the object at a loss. And vice versa, if an
individual bids below his own willingness to pay, he runs the risk
of someone else buying the item at a lower price than the amount he
himself is willing to pay. Therefore, in this kind of auction, it is
in the individual's best interest to state a truthful bid. The
auction is also socially efficient. The object goes to the person
with the highest willingness to pay, and the person in question pays
the social opportunity cost which is the second highest bid. Other
researchers have later developed analogous principles, for example
in order to elicit the true willingness to pay for public projects.
Thus, Vickrey's analysis has not only been momentous for the theory
of auctions; it has also conveyed fundamental insights into the
design of resource allocation mechanisms aimed at providing socially
desirable incentives.
Other
Contributions
In
addition, both James Mirrlees and William Vickrey have made
noteworthy contributions to other areas of economics. In
collaboration with the U.S. economist Peter Diamond, Mirrlees
analyzed the structure of consumption taxes in a world where tax
wedges give rise to social inefficiency. They arrived at an
unambiguous and highly universal result by showing that under
relatively general conditions, it is worthwhile to maintain full
production efficiency. In concrete terms, this means that small open
economies should not impose tariffs on foreign trade and that taxes
on factors of production such as labor and capital should not be
levied on the production side, but at the consumption stage. The
latter result has had important consequences for project appraisal
and economic policy in developing countries. In work with the
British economist Ian Little and based on his research with Diamond,
Mirrlees himself has set up criteria for evaluating development
projects.
Efficient
pricing of public services permeates Vickrey's scientific
production. He has not only made significant theoretical
contributions, but - unlike most excellent theorists - he has also
followed up on his proposals all the way to their practical
application. An example is Vickrey's famous study of the New York
subway fare system in the 1950s. His proposal was an early attempt
at efficient pricing of public services, under the restriction that
the authorities should receive full cost coverage. His study
represents more than an improvement on the basic pricing principle
(so-called Ramsey pricing); it is also fascinating in its wealth of
detail.
James
A. Mirrlees was born in 1936 in Minnigaff, Scotland. He received
his M.S. in Mathematics in Edinburgh in 1957, and his Ph.D. from the
University of Cambridge in 1963. He was Edgeworth Professor of
Economics at Oxford University between 1969 and 1995, and currently
holds a professorship in Economics at the University of Cambridge.
Professor
James A. Mirrlees
Department of Economics and Politics
University of Cambridge
Sidgwick Avenue
Cambridge CB3 9DD
U.K.
William
Vickrey was born in 1914 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
He received his B.S. from Yale University in 1935. He then began
postgraduate studies at Columbia University, New York, where he
received his Master's degree in 1937 and his Ph.D. in 1947. He has
been affiliated with the faculty of Columbia University since 1946,
and also served as a tax advisor between 1937 and 1947. He was
Professor Emeritus at Columbia University.
Additional
background material on the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences
in Memory of Alfred Nobel, 1996
.
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