Stockholm — Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt won the 2025 Nobel economics prize on Monday for their work on how innovation and the forces of “creative destruction” can drive economic growth and lift living standards across the globe.
Their research explains how technology gives rise to new products and production methods, which replace old ones, resulting in a better standard of living, health and quality of life.
“Over the last two centuries, for the first time in history, the world has seen sustained economic growth. This has lifted vast numbers of people out of poverty and laid the foundation of our prosperity,” the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which awards the prize, said in a statement.
The laureates have also shown that such progress cannot be taken for granted, the academy said, while two of the prize winners highlighted that US President Donald Trump’s trade policies would impinge on growth.
“Economic stagnation, not growth, has been the norm for most of human history. Their work shows that we must be aware of, and counteract, threats to continued growth,” the academy said. While most economists view economic growth as a driver of prosperity, there are some who do not see it as an unalloyed good.
The 2024 economics prize was won by Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James Robinson for work on inequality. Johnson, in particular, has pointed to how the benefits of technological innovation can be skewed towards powerful elites.
There is also a fierce debate about what level of growth is sustainable in the light of man-made climate change and environmental degradation.
The prestigious award, formally known as the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, is the final prize to be given out this year and is worth 11-million kronor ($1.2m).
Mokyr, a professor at Northwestern University in the US, was awarded half the prize. Aghion, a professor at the College de France and at the London School of Economics, and Howitt, a professor at Brown University in the US, shared the other half.
The award comes at a potential inflection point for the global economy, with many expecting AI to spark a new growth spurt. It also highlights the strategic risks for Europe of falling further behind the US and China on technologies of the future as well as the potential costs of barriers to global trade.
Speaking by phone at the press conference, Aghion said deglobalisation and tariff barriers were “obstacles to growth” adding that the bigger the market the more possibilities to exchange ideas and transfer technologies and for healthy competition.
“Anything that gets in the way of openness is an obstacle to growth. So I see … dark clouds currently accumulating,” he said.
Aghion called on Europe to learn from the US and China, which he said have found ways to reconcile competition and industrial policy.
“In Europe, in the name of competition policy, we became very anti any form of industrial policy. I think we need to evolve on that and find ways to reconcile industrial policy in areas like defence, climate, AI, biotech,” he said.
Howitt, who said he had been “absolutely stunned” by the award, was also critical of Trump’s trade policies. “It’s pretty clear that these are going to discourage innovation by reducing what we call the scale effect, he told Reuters. “Starting a tariff war just reduces the size of the market for everybody.”
He said that trying to bring manufacturing jobs back to the US could perhaps make some political sense but was not good economic policy. “We’re good at designing running shoes, but it’s best for us to leave others to make them,” he said.
The awards for medicine, physics, chemistry, peace and literature were announced last week. Those prizes were established in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor and businessman Alfred Nobel and have been handed out since 1901, with a few interruptions, mostly due to the world wars.
The economics prize was established much later, being given out first in 1969 when it was won by Norway’s Ragnar Frisch and Jan Tinbergen from the Netherlands for work in dynamic economic modelling.
While few economists are household names, relatively well-known winners include former US Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke, Paul Krugman and Milton Friedman.
Reuters











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