The Nobel Prize in Economics was established in 1969. The following is a list of the m {as of 60 awarded by the Royal Academy of Sciences of Sweden in the 41 years:
2010: Peter A. Diamond, Dale T. Mortensen (USA) and Christopher A. Passerines (USA), to answer fundamental questions about the functioning of the supply and demand in the labor market.
2009: neither Eli nor Nostrum (USA), for his work on property management by user associations, and Oliver Williamson (USA), for his theory of corporate conflict resolution.
2008: Paul Kurgan (USA), for his analysis of trade patterns and location of economic activity.
2007: Leonid Hurwitz (USA), Eric Masking (USA) and Roger Myerson (USA), to lay the foundations of the theory of mechanism design, which determines when markets are working effectively.
2006: Edmund S. Phelps (USA), for his research on the interaction between prices, unemployment and inflation expectations.
2005: Robert Baumann (Israel) and Thomas Schilling (USA), to broaden the understanding of conflict and cooperation through the analysis based on game theory.
2004: Finn Kidman (Norway) and Edward Prescott (USA), for their contributions to dynamic macroeconomics theory.
2003: Robert Engle (USA) and Clive Granger (United Kingdom) for his studies of statistical methods in economic time series that allows for incorporating unpredictable.
2002: Denial Kane (USA) and Vernon Smith (USA), to integrate aspects of psychological theory comportment on the economic well-being in times of uncertainty and empirical analysis laboratory, especially on alternative market mechanisms.
2001: George Aero (USA), Michael Spence (USA) and Joseph Stilts (U.S.) for his research in the theory of markets with asymmetric information.
2000: James J. Heckman (USA) and Daniel L. McFadden (USA), to design methods for understanding the economic behavior of family economies and individuals.
1999: Robert A. Mendel (USA).
1998: Marty Sen. (India).
1997: Robert C. Merton (U.S.) and Myron S. Schools (U.S.).
1996: James A. Merles (United Kingdom) and William Vickers (Canada).
1995: Robert E. Lucas (USA).
1994: John F. Nash (USA), John C. Hearsay (USA) and Reinhardt Sultan (Germany).
1993: Robert F. Fugal (USA) and Douglas C. North (USA).
1992: Gary S. Becker (USA).
1991: Ronald H. Cease (United Kingdom).
1990: Harry Markowitz (USA), Merton Miller (USA) and William Sharpe (USA).
1989: Trivet Havelock (Norway).
1988: Maurice Allays (France).
1987: Robert M. Slow (USA).
1986: James McGill Buchanan (USA).
1985: Franco Modigliani (USA).
1984: Richard Stone (UK).
1983: Gerard Debreu (U.S.).
1982: George J. Stigler (USA).
1981: James Tobin (USA).
1980: Lawrence R. Klein (USA).
1979: Arthur Lewis (USA).
1977: James Edward Meade (United Kingdom) and Bertie Goatherd Olin (Sweden).
1976: Milton Friedman (USA).
1975: Tallying C. Kopsas (U.S.) and Vitaliyevich Leonid Kantorovich (Russian).
1974: Gunner Myra (Sweden) and Friedrich August von Hayek (United Kingdom).
1973: Sassily W. Leonie (U.S.).
1972: John Richard Hicks (United Kingdom) and Kenneth Joseph Arrow (USA).
1971: Simon Smith Kunzites (U.S.).
1970: Paul Anthony Samuelson (USA).
1969: Jan Tin Bergen (Netherlands) and Ranger Anton Kittle Frisch (Norway).

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