Excitement builds for final 2012 Nobel

October 15, 2012
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Nobel Prize for economics caps prestigious, sometimes surprising award season

By Chelsea J. Carter, CNN

October 15, 2012 — Updated 0928 GMT (1728 HKT)

Professor Thomas Sargent, left, and Professor Christopher Sims shared the 2011 Nobel Prize for economics.

Professor Thomas Sargent, left, and Professor Christopher Sims shared the 2011 Nobel Prize for economics.

(CNN) — The announcement of the 2012 Nobel Prize for economics on Monday closes out the prestigious award season that has seen its share of surprise.

The Nobel Prize for economics is the sixth and final of the annual awards that a spotlight on the world’s top scholars and peacemakers.

The economics award was not among the original prizes created in 1895 by Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel to honor work in physics, medicine, chemistry, literature and peace. It was added as a category in 1969 by the Swedish central bank in memory of the industrialist.

Nobel Prize in physics: Frenchman, American joint winners

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Nobel Prize in chemistry: Win for Americans

As such, the economics prize is given by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences — following the same principles used to determine the other Nobel Prize winners, according to the Nobel committee.

The monetary award that accompanies the Nobel Prize was lowered by the foundation this year by 20%
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from 10 million Swedish kronor ($1.5 million) to 8 million kronor ($1.2 million) because of the turbulence that hit the financial markets.

The economics selection follows last week’s awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to the European Union, a selection that surprised many and drew scorn from Italian and Greek demonstrators who took to the streets to protest austerity measures.

Opinion: Nobel Committee wasted an opportunity in its Peace Prize

The 27-nation union was honored for its work in promoting democracy and reconciliation following World War II, even as it grapples with a financial crisis that threatens to break the EU apart.

Opinion: Why Europe deserved Peace Prize

“The Nobel committee is a little late for an April fools joke,” Martin Callanan, leader of the Conservatives and Reformists party in the European Parliament, said.

While Callanan called the Nobel committee “out of touch,” others applauded the selection.

Another surprise was the Nobel committee’s selection of Chinese writer Mo Yan as the winner of the Nobel Prize for literature.

The Chinese author — whose pen name means “not talking” — has captivated his countrymen by intertwining fantasy and gritty everyday life.

Mo, a Communist Party member, is considered a writer within the system and has embraced official party restrictions on writing. He also was elected by the Communist Party to a vice-chairman spot in the state-sanctioned China Writers Association.

Unlike the news blackout in China two years ago when Chinese dissident Liu Xiabo won the Nobel Peace Prize, state-run media reported Mo’s win immediately following the announcement.

Patrick Poon of the Independent Chinese Pen Center said the award by the Nobel committee appeared to be a recognition — or attempt to please — the Chinese government.

This year’s prize for economics will be selected from among hundreds of nominations, the Nobel committee said.

Two Americans shared the prize last year for their study of the cause-and-effect relationship between government and economic policy.

Thomas Sargent, a professor at New York University, and Christopher Sims, a professor at Princeton University, carried out their research independently, though their work was considered complementary of one another.

Sargent and Sims received their doctorates from Harvard in 1968.

Read more: Nobel Peace Prize winner rips into fellow laureate over corruption

CNN’s Ben Brumfield and J
850
oe Sterling contributed to this report.

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Excitement builds for final 2012 Nobel

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