NOBEL PRIZE WINNER JOSEPH
STIGLITZ
‘[Joseph] Stiglitz’s emergence as a prominent critic of
the current economic order was no surprise. His original Ph.D. thesis was on inequality. And his entire career
in academia has been devoted to showing how markets cannot always be counted on
to produce ideal results. In a series of enormously important papers, for which
he would eventually win the Nobel Prize, Stiglitz showed how imperfections and
asymmetries of information regularly lead markets to results that do not
maximize welfare. He also argued that this meant, at least in theory, that
well-placed government interventions could help correct these market failures. Stiglitz’s work in this field
has continued: he has just written (with Bruce Greenwald) Creating a Learning
Society, a dense academic work on how government policy can help drive
innovation in the age of the knowledge economy.”
James Surowiecki, “Why the Rich Are So Much Richer,” in the New
York Review, September 24, 2015, pp: 32-36.