Forecasting the Winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics
The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Science in Memory of Alfred Nobel (aka the Nobel Prize in Economics) will be announced on Monday, October 10, 2005. Of the 55 men who have won the award outright or shared in it since the prize began in 1969 (no woman has yet to win it), 36 have been Americans. The leading university homes of the winners include the University of Chicago (9), followed by Harvard (4), University of California-Berkeley (4), and Cambridge University, England (4).
Now, let's see how well you can forecast. I will award 2 bonus points to the first person who correctly forecasts the next winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics. Your educated guess must be posted as a comment to this blog post before the Nobel Prize announcement is made. In the event that more than one person submit identical guesses, the earlier timestamp of the comment will determine the winner. The bonus points will be added to the winner's next exam score following the Nobel announcement on October 10.
[By the way, any comments made to this post do not qualify as part of the required components to your blog grade.]
1 comment:
After reading up on a number of Nobel hopefuls, Robert J. Barro came to my mind as a possible winner. A number of economists believed he was in the running in 2004 and should be again this year. Dr. Barro is an Economics professor at Harvard. His work on Macroeconomics and monetary policy is his trademark.
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