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The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1995
Robert E. Lucas Jr.
The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1995
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony
Robert E. Lucas Jr.
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Press Release
10 October 1995
The
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the
Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred
Nobel, 1995, to
Professor Robert E. Lucas, Jr., University of
Chicago, USA,
for having developed and applied the hypothesis of rational
expectations, and thereby having transformed macroeconomic
analysis and deepened our understanding of economic
policy.
Rational Expectations Have Transformed Macroeconomic Analysis and Our Understanding of Economic Policy
Robert Lucas is the economist who has had the greatest
influence on macroeconomic research since 1970. His work has
brought about a rapid and revolutionary development: Application
of the rational expectations hypothesis, emergence of an
equilibrium theory of business cycles, insights into the
difficulties of using economic policy to control the economy, and
possibilities of reliably evaluating economic policy with
statistical methods. In addition to his work in macroeconomics,
Lucas's contributions have had a very significant impact on
research in several other fields.
Rational Expectations
Expectations about the future are highly important to economic
decisions made by households, firms and organizations. One among
many examples is wage formation, where expectations about the
inflation rate and the demand for labor in the future strongly
affect the contracted wage level which, in turn, affects future
inflation. Similarly, many other economic variables are to a
large extent governed by expectations about future
conditions.
Despite the major importance of expectations, economic analysis
paid them only perfunctory attention for a long time. Twenty
years ago, it was not unusual to assume arbitrarily specified or
even static expectations, for example that the expected future
price level was regarded as the same as today's price level. Or
else adaptive expectations were assumed, such that the expected
future price level was mechanically adjusted to the deviation
between today's price level and the price level expected
earlier.
Instead, rational expectations are genuinely forward-looking. The
rational expectations hypothesis means that agents exploit
available information without making the systematic mistakes
implied by earlier theories. Expectations are formed by
constantly updating and reinterpreting this information.
Sometimes the consequences of rational expectations formation are
dramatic, as in the case of economic policy. The first precise
formulation of the rational expectations hypothesis was
introduced by John Muth in 1961. But it did not gain much
prominence until the 1970s, when Lucas extended it to models of
the aggregate economy. In a series of path-breaking articles,
Lucas demonstrated the far-reaching consequences of rational
expectations formation, particularly concerning the effects of
economic policy and the evaluation of these effects using
econometric methods, that is, statistical methods specifically
adapted for examining economic relationships. Lucas also applied
the hypothesis to several fields other than macroeconomics.
The Phillips Curve Example
The change in our understanding of the so-called Phillips curve
is an excellent example of Lucas's contributions. The Phillips
curve displays a positive relation between inflation and
employment. In the late 1960s, there was considerable empirical
support for the Phillips curve; it was regarded as one of the
more stable relations in economics. It was interpreted as an
option for government authorities to increase employment by
pursuing an expansionary policy which raises inflation. Milton Friedman and Edmund Phelps
criticized this interpretation and claimed that the expectations
of the general public would adjust to higher inflation and
preclude a lasting increase in employment: Only the short-run
Phillips curve is sloping, whereas the long-run curve is
vertical. This criticism was not quite convincing, however,
because Friedman and Phelps assumed adaptive expectations. Such
expectations do in fact imply a permanent rise in employment if
inflation is allowed to increase over time. In a study published
in 1972, Lucas used the rational expectations hypothesis to
provide the first theoretically satisfactory explanation for why
the Phillips curve could be sloping in the short run but vertical
in the long run. In other words, regardless of how it is pursued,
stabilization policy cannot systematically affect long-run
employment. Lucas formulated an ingenious theoretical model which
generates time series such that inflation and employment indeed
seem to be positively correlated. A statistician who studies
these time series might easily conclude that employment could be
increased by implementing an expansionary economic policy.
Nevertheless, Lucas demonstrated that any endeavor, based on such
policy, to exploit the Phillips curve and permanently increase
employment would be futile and only give rise to higher
inflation. This is because agents in the model adjust their
expectations and hence price and wage formation to the new,
expected policy. Experience during the 1970s and 1980s has shown
that higher inflation does not appear to bring about a permanent
increase in employment. This insight into the long-run effects of
stabilization policy has become a commonly accepted view; it is
now the foundation for monetary policy in a number of countries
in their efforts to achieve and maintain a low and stable
inflation rate.
The short-run sloping and long-run vertical Phillips curve
illustrates the pitfalls of uncritically relying on statistically
estimated so-called macroeconometric models to draw conclusions
about the effects of changes in economic policy. In a 1976 study,
introducing what is now known as the "Lucas critique", Lucas
demonstrated that relations which had so far been regarded as
"structural" in econometric analysis were in fact influenced by
past policy. Two decades ago, virtually all macroeconometric
models contained relations which, on closer examination, could be
shown to depend on the fiscal and monetary policy carried out
during the estimation period. Obviously, then, the same relations
cannot be used in simulations designed to predict the effect of
another fiscal or monetary policy. Yet this was exactly how the
models were often used.
The Lucas critique has had a profound influence on
economic-policy recommendations. Shifts in economic policy often
produce a completely different outcome if the agents adapt their
expectations to the new policy stance. Nowadays, when evaluating
the consequences of shifts in economic-policy regimes - for
example, a new exchange rate system, a new monetary policy, a tax
reform or new rules for unemployment benefits - it is more or
less self-evident to consider changes in the behavior of economic
agents due to revised expectations.
How could researchers avoid the mistakes forewarned by the Lucas
critique? Lucas's own research provided the answer by calling for
a new research program. The objective of the program was to
formulate macroeconometric models such that their relations are
not sensitive to policy changes; otherwise, the models cannot
contribute to a reliable assessment of economic-policy
alternatives. It is easy to formulate this principle: the models
should be "equilibrium models" with rational expectations. This
means that all important variables should be determined within
the model, on the basis of interaction among rational agents who
have rational expectations and operate in a well-specified
economic environment. In addition, the models should be
formulated so that they only incorporate policy-independent
parameters (those coefficients which describe the relations of
the models). This, in turn, requires sound microeconomic
foundations, i.e., the individual agents' decision problems have
to be completely accounted for in the model. The parameters are
then estimated using econometric methods developed for this
purpose. Interesting attempts to derive and estimate such models
have subsequently been made in several different areas, such as
the empirical analysis of investment, consumption and employment,
as well as of asset pricing on financial markets. The program can
be difficult to implement in practice however, and not all
attempts have been successful.
A Large Following
Lucas formulated powerful and
operational methods for drawing conclusions from models with
rational expectations. These methods provided the means for rapid
development of macroeconomic analysis and eventually became part
of the standard toolbox. Without them, the outcome of the
rational expectations hypothesis would have been limited to
general insights into the importance of expectations instead of
clear-cut statements in specific situations. Rational
expectations have now been accepted as the natural basis for
further studies of expectation formation with respect to limited
rationality, limited computational capacity and gradual
learning.
Lucas has established new areas of research. After his pioneering
work on the Phillips curve, the so-called equilibrium theory of
business cycles has become an extensive and dynamic field, where
the effects of real and monetary disturbances on the business
cycle have been carefully examined. The equilibrium theory of
business cycles initially relied on the assumption of completely
flexible prices and immediate adjustment to equilibrium on goods
and labor markets with perfect competition. However, Lucas's
methodological approach is not incompatible with sticky prices
and various market failures such as imperfect competition and
imperfect information. Nevertheless, these frictions and
imperfections should not be introduced in an arbitrary way, but
should be explained as a result of rational agents' decisions and
interaction in a well-specified choice situation. Interpreted in
this way, Lucas's methodological approach has been accepted by
nearly all macroeconomists. Indeed, the greatest advances in
modeling frictions and market imperfections seem to have been
made precisely when this methodological approach has been
followed.
Lucas's pioneering work has created an entirely new field of
econometrics, known as rational expectations econometrics. There,
the rational expectations hypothesis is used to identify the most
efficient statistical methods for estimating economic relations
where expectations are the key components. A number of
researchers have subsequently made important contributions to
this new field.
Other Contributions
In
addition to his work in macroeconomics, Lucas has made
outstanding contributions to investment theory, financial
economics, monetary theory, dynamic public economics,
international finance and, most recently, the theory of economic
growth. In each of these fields, Lucas's studies have had a
significant impact; they have launched new ideas and generated an
extensive new literature.
Further reading
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (1995), The Scientific Contributions of Robert E. Lucas,
Jr.
Lucas, R.E. (1972), "Expectations and the Neutrality of Money",
Journal of Economic Theory 4, 103-124.
Lucas, R.E. (1976), "Econometric Policy Evaluation: A Critique",
Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 1,
19-46.
Lucas, R.E. (1981), Studies in Business-Cycle Theory,
MITPress, Cambridge, MA.
Lucas, R.E. (1987), Models of Business Cycles, 1985,
Yrjö Jahnsson Lectures, Basil Blackwell, Oxford.
Lucas's achievements are described at greater length in Royal
Swedish Academy of Sciences (1995). His two best-known
publications are Lucas (1972) and (1976). The research he carried
out during the 1970s is compiled in Lucas (1981). A relatively
easily accessible account of his views on business-cycle theory
may be found in Lucas (1987).
Robert E. Lucas, Jr. was born in 1937 in Yakima, Washington, USA. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago in 1964. He began as Assistant Professor of Economics in 1963 at Carnegie-Mellon University, where he became Associate Professor in 1967 and Professor of Economics in 1970. Since 1975, he has held a professorship in Economics at the University of Chicago. He is Second Vice-President of the Econometric Society, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a member of the National Academy of Sciences.
Professor Robert E. Lucas, Jr.
Department of Economics
University of Chicago
1126 East 59th Street
Chicago, IL 60637
USA
The Scientific Contributions of Robert E. Lucas, Jr. »
MLA style: "The Prize in Economics 1995 - Press Release". Nobelprize.org. 22 Feb 2012 http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/1995/press.html

