 
                		
                								
													Today, the Nobel Prize in Economics was awarded to Joel Mokyr (Northwestern University), Philippe Aghion (London School of Economics), and Peter Howitt (Brown University) “for having explained innovation-driven economic growth.”1 This follows a recent trend for the Committee to award to economics focused on economic growth, following Acemoglou, Johnson, and Robinson in 2024 and Kremer, Duflo, and Banerjee in 2019. Time and space prevent me from providing a detailed discussion of the ideas behind each prize, but they are all crucial to our understanding of economics.
One of the big mysteries of human history is the so-called “hockey-stick of prosperity.” That is, the fact that, for much of human history, standards of living were virtually unchanged. Very little separated the Roman citizen in 1AD from the British citizen in 1700. But, starting in the 1700s, standards of living skyrocketed.
From 1AD to 1700AD, few changes happened: sails and animal-powered transport dominated, medical science hadn’t advanced much, and machinery was unknown. From 1700 to 1800, changes were beginning: mechanical engines were introduced and the Industrial Revolution began. Between 1800 to 1900, the world went from horse and buggy to steam engines. Between 1900 and 1960, humanity went from automobiles to planes to landing on the moon.2 Diseases were eradicated, lives were improved. Real poverty fell from around 90% of the global population to less than 10%. Nothing like this had happened before, and it kept happening. Even the most optimistic economists at the time had trouble explaining it.
Enter Mokyr, Aghion, and Howitt. Collectively, their work helped explain why this growth happened, why it happened where it did, and how it is sustainable.
Mokyr argues that the Industrial Revolution and the benefits it provided were no accident of history, but rather the result of institutions. Economic growth arises out of two kinds of knowledge: propositional knowledge (how and why things work) and prescriptive knowledge (practical knowledge of necessary things to get things to work, such as institutions or recipes). These two forms of knowledge work together, building on one another, to create economic growth. For example, economic sciences (propositional knowledge) will tell us where prices come from, how people coordinate their behavior, etc. That understanding, in turn, helps us consider what kind of institutions (prescriptive knowledge) are needed to foster those trends.
Furthermore, the fragmented state of Europe led to the rise of the Industrial Revolution. With various states competing with each other for political dominance, and none particularly large, people could move (or flee) if their ideas were being suppressed. In large unitary nations like China and India (which were of roughly the same technological level as Europe pre-industrialization), ideas were suppressed and people had little option to leave. Because it subverted the suppression of new ideas, the fragmentation of Europe led to greater technological strengths. This trend could sometimes even be observed within states, such as in the British Empire. Scotland was a backwater, mostly ignored by the ruling elite in London post-unification, and yet that is where the Industrial Revolution kicked off.
Mokyr called this the culture of growth (also the name of his excellent 2016 book). Technological innovation is not random, but rather requires a culture that promotes innovation and a market for ideas.
Aghion and Howitt contribute in a different way. Their landmark paper “A Model of Growth Through Creative Destruction” (Econometrica, 60(2)) builds a mathematical model of Joseph Schumpeter’s verbal model of creative destruction. Firms face both a carrot and a stick to innovate. The carrot is the rents they can get for innovations. Through the creative process, they make old technologies obsolete, both eliminating the old technologies and grabbing market share (or rents). The stick comes from the constant threat of others acting the same way: each must innovate to prevent losing rents.
But Aghion and Howitt also uncovered limitations. When the rents become very large, an incumbent firm can create barriers to entry. This reduces the stick from competition. Further, once rents (the carrot) have been secured, there is less incentive for firms to innovate. Differences in firm, market, and legal structures help explain why some industries are highly innovative and others are stagnant.
All three winners explain economic growth through technology and culture (broadly defined). My little overview does not pretend to present the entirety of their work. I highly recommend the Nobel Committee’s overview of their contributions.
Congratulations to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt for a well-deserved award!
[1] Please, nobody say “There is no Nobel Prize in Economics. It’s the “Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.” We all know.
[2] As an aside, I find the whole space program amazing. A bunch of scientists went to folks like Chuck Yeager and said, “We have an idea: we’re going to take missiles, remove the warhead, bolt on a couple of seats, and fling you at the Moon,” and these pilots said, “Sounds fun! Sign me up.”
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READER COMMENTS
Matthias
Oct 13 2025 at 8:38pm
When was India a unitarian state, or even under a unified government at all? That’s fairly rare in Indian history.
Throughout history China also was ‘between dynasties’ (ie divided) about almost as much as it was under nominally unified government.
Jon Murphy
Oct 13 2025 at 11:02pm
The Mughal Empire
Mactoul
Oct 14 2025 at 9:47pm
Which was a most chaotic entity.
Jon Murphy
Oct 14 2025 at 10:16pm
Still a large, unitary state that lasted for about 300 years.
Mactoul
Oct 14 2025 at 11:05pm
Which contained a large and varying number of semi-independent states, kingdoms, fiefdoms at all levels.
Didn’t even run 300 years. From accession of Akbar in 1556 to the sack of Nadir Shah in 1739, it was a great power.
After that, it merely controlled Delhi and environs., and that too at sufferance of first Marathas and then English.
Even in its heyday, its disorder was Holy Roman Empire (at its most chaotic) times 10.
Mactoul
Oct 15 2025 at 8:25pm
I don’t know what precisely is meant by unitary but the Mughal empire incorporated a large number of semi-independent kingdoms, rather loosely controlled.
It also didn’t last 300 years as a power. After the sack of Nadir Shah in 1739, the Mughal power rapidly disintegrated and was essentially limited to Delhi.
Matthias
Oct 15 2025 at 9:00pm
What do you mean by ‘unitary’?
I suspect you don’t mean it in the modern sense of being the opposite to ‘federal’?
In any case, as far as I can tell, the Mughal controlled enough of India at some point in time (at least on a map) to round it off to all of India. But that control was at the height of their power, and not for 300 years.
For most of its history, India was rather fragmented and not seen as a unified whole, nor even as something that needs to be unified.
Jon Murphy
Oct 16 2025 at 10:36am
This is what a unitary state is: https://www.britannica.com/topic/unitary-state
Jon Murphy
Oct 16 2025 at 10:37am
Correct. An unitary state.
Do not confuse disorder and fragmentation.
nobody.really
Oct 14 2025 at 1:26pm
A crucial insight when chatting with people who heap all praise on successful individuals.
There is no Nobel Prize in Economics. It’s the “Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel.”
Jon Murphy
Oct 14 2025 at 3:06pm
I really need to stop falling for that…
David Seltzer
Oct 14 2025 at 3:12pm
Jon: Cool beans!!! “A bunch of scientists went to folks like Chuck Yeager and said, “We have an idea: we’re going to take missiles, remove the warhead, bolt on a couple of seats, and fling you at the Moon,” and these pilots said, “Sounds fun! Sign me up.” Yeager is one of my personal heroes. He hid the fact that his ribs were broken in a horse riding accident. He could fly with his ribs broken, but he wasn’t sure how to close and latch the X-1’s side door. The door had to be pulled into place and latched from the inside. He used…innovated…a makeshift handle out of a broomstick. Yeager tried it in the X-1 before launch and was able to lock the cockpit door. Truly badass!!
Jon Murphy
Oct 14 2025 at 3:16pm
I did not know that. Great story!
Mactoul
Oct 14 2025 at 10:59pm
Isn’t war a major driver of innovations?
In particular, all sorts of innovations in 20c were greatly driven by second World War.
Jon Murphy
Oct 15 2025 at 6:41am
War can create some inventions, sure. It’s not a driver of economic growth though. War inventions tend to destroy. It’s the innovation in peace time that creates economic growth.
steve
Oct 15 2025 at 10:58am
I think it’s more that new technology is developed in order to carry out war and that new technology carries over into other areas of the economy. War in Europe rapidly progressed metallurgy, transportation, food prep and storage (think canned foods and margarine among others) etc.
Steve
Jon Murphy
Oct 15 2025 at 11:40am
You are correct. That’s what I meant by “innovation.”
David Jones
Oct 27 2025 at 1:58am
One should not believe that humans should cease innovation, etc. just because their fellow humans engage in destructive behavior.
Roger McKinney
Oct 16 2025 at 6:16pm
The problem with that explanation is that he doesn’t explain how there was any nation that did not suppress ideas. McClosky admires Mokyr but also shows that all of Europe had a culture that despised commerce. The Church taught that businessmen in commerce including manufacturing were evil and would go to hell. The nobility could plunder common people with impunity and did. That’s why innovation was rare.
Helmut Schoeck shows in his classic Envy: A Theory of Social Behavior that envy blocks innovation through institutions. Maker ignores that.
None of the Nobel winners explain why the industrial revolution began in the Dutch Republic in the 17th century and England didn’t catch on for a century later. So many things the winners ignore.
The best answer is that theologians at the University of Salamanca during the Reformation distilled the principles of capitalism. The Dutch Republic first implemented those principles and launched the industrial revolution
It became the first capitalist nation. It exported its system to England in 1688 when the Dutch conquered England.
Sociologists yell us that religion determines culture and culture creates institutions. But most academics refuse to attribute anything good to Christianity. McCloskey proved that the industrial revolution required a huge cultural change to launch the industrial revolution. But even he chokes when explaining how the cultural change happened, though acknowledging that it happened first in the Dutch Republic.
Jonathan Israel in his book on the Dutch Republic shows that the culture of the Dutch changed radically with the Reformation. All visitors from other countries were shocked at how different Dutch culture was.
Mactoul
Oct 18 2025 at 12:09am
This is absurd. Can you cite any document that Church, by which I suppose you mean Catholic Church, ever taught any such thing.
Venice and other Italian cities, strongholds of the Catholic Church, we’re no sluggard at commerce and manufacturing. They were, in fact, leading commercial city-states of the period. And filled with grand Churches and great piety.
Mactoul
Oct 18 2025 at 12:04am
Economic liberalism can only arise in a country with reasonable security of life and property. The role of states in reducing interpersonal violence, from ancient Sumer to modern Europe, though well-known to social scientists, is not appreciated by economists to the same extent.
This, and not political fragmentation, is the essential reason why economic liberalism took off in 18c Europe, particularly Britain, and not elsewhere such as Mughal empire.
Jon Murphy
Oct 19 2025 at 7:01pm
That’s kind of the definition, so yeah.
Open any economics book and you’ll find we agree with that statement.
Knut P. Heen
Oct 20 2025 at 11:15am
They are downplaying the importance of coal. The Newcomen engine of 1712 was so inefficient that it would never have been used without abundant access to the coal from the mine itself. It was used to pump water out of the coal mine. The first engine replaced 500 horses. The Watt engine merely improved the energy efficiency of the Newcomen engine.
The technological innovation needed to go from a water mill to a steam engine is rather small. Both use water to create motion. The real challenge was to create the steam cheaply. Producing steam requires a lot of energy. Then you simply cool the steam to create motion in a beam. You lose a lot of energy in this repeated heating-cooling-process.
You literally had to be sitting on coal for the Newcomen engine to make economic sense. They continued using horses for pumping water out of other mines.
Later steam engines was first used to pump water through water mills illustrating how closely linked these technologies really were. Eventually, they built engines which could replace the water mill directly.