A natural choice
Source: The Economist
Oct 12th 2006 (Adapted)
Born in the trough of the Great Depression, Edmund Phelps, a
professor at Columbia University who this week won the Nobel prize for
economics, has spent much of his intellectual life studying slumps of a
different kind. The Depression, which cost both of his parents their
jobs, was exacerbated by the monetary authorities, who kept too tight a
grip on the money supply. Mr Phelps is interested in unemployment that
even open-handed central bankers cannot cure.
Most
scholars stand on the shoulders of giants. But Mr Phelps won his laurels
in part for kicking the feet from under his intellectual forerunners.
In 1958 William Phillips, of the London School of Economics, showed that
for much of the previous hundred years, unemployment was low in Britain
when wage infl ation was high, and high when inflation was low.
Economists were quick - too quick - to conclude that policymakers
therefore faced a grand, macroeconomic trade-off, embodied in the
so-called "Phillips curve". They could settle for unemployment of, say,
6% and an inflation rate of 1% - as prevailed in America at the start of
the 1960s - or they could quicken the economy, cutting unemployment by a
couple of percentage points at the expense of inflation of 3% or so -
which is roughly how things stood in America when Mr Phelps published
his first paper on the subject in 1967.
In paragraph 2, Mr Phelps'academic work is featured as