Ocnus.Net
Nobel-winning Economist who put a Premium on Truth
By Tim Harford, FT 19/7/08
Jul 20, 2008 - 6:08:06 AM
For years economists had been passionately debating the rival merits of
state planning versus free markets. In both systems, people had
incentives to lie to bureaucratic planners or to employers about their
interests, their skills or their circumstances. "Leo", who has died at
the age of 90, founded the field of "mechanism design", a new way of
thinking which focused on giving people incentives to tell the truth
and to do so in a way that would benefit society as a whole.
His mechanism design idea has applications in a range of practical
areas, from the design of computer networks and voting systems to
arbitration rules.
The debate between state planning and free markets must have seemed far
from academic to Hurwicz. His parents were Polish Jews who fled the
Kaiser's invading army, going to Moscow, where Hurwicz was born in
1917. They returned to Poland in a horse-drawn wagon to escape the
Bolsheviks when he was two. He went to the University of Warsaw and
took a degree in law, though he also studied piano at the conservatory.
Throughout his life Hurwicz was a renaissance man whose interests
included music, linguistics, maths, physics and meteorology. Yet as a
student his interest was kindled in economics. He went to London to
study and then, via Geneva, to the US, where he arrived in 1940. His
parents and his brother joined him but only after fleeing another
invading German army - this time the Nazis - and then spending time in
Soviet labour camps.
On his travels, Hurwicz had studied under both Ludwig von Mises and
Friedrich Hayek, who was at the London School of Economics as Hurwicz
began his PhD studies there in 1938. Von Mises and Hayek argued that a
centrally planned economy was doomed to collapse: because every
individual knew his own needs and capabilities best, government
planners could never hope to piece it all together and make sensible
decisions. Other economists, such as Oskar Lange, disagreed.
A burgeoning economic theory of competitive markets, and bitter
experience of the failings of socialist economies, led many to conclude
that von Mises and Hayek were right.
Hurwicz was more interested in advancing the debate than declaring
victory. "Panaceas are not to be found at either end of the spectrum,"
he wrote in 1984. He agreed with Hayek and von Mises that a bureaucrat
who simply demanded results would be met with slacking, budgetpadding
and lies. But rather than giving up, Hurwicz attacked the problem
directly. He asked what "mechanisms" an intelligent but ill-informed
planner might use to extract information from others and then allocate
resources fairly, efficiently or profitably.
Such mechanisms are as old as trade itself, most obviously the auction,
in which even an ignorant seller can expect a good price. But Hurwicz
laid the foundations for thinking systematically about designing
mechanisms, defining all the terms rigorously and showing what might be
possible.
Hurwicz described a mechanism as a kind of "message centre", where
market participants would submit information, true or false, and a
pre-specified set of rules would adjudicate the result.
That abstract description is a perfect account of an Ebay auction: a
seller sets a minimum bid, a time limit and perhaps a reserve price,
while bidders submit bids that may bear no resemblance to the true
value they place on the prize. EBay is just one example of a message
centre; Hurwicz showed that it was useful to think about many economic
institutions in this way.
Participants in a mechanism can always lie. A keen buyer can pretend to
be an indifferent one; a brilliant worker can conceal his laziness.
Hurwicz realised that in order to get a better bid from the keenest
buyer, for example, the seller must give that buyer a reason to tell
the truth.
Similarly, an employer cannot persuade the ablest worker to work just
as hard as the rest unless the extra effort brings extra rewards. The
general problem of persuading the "best" agents to act differently from
the rest is called the "incentive compatibility constraint".
One example would be an auction where the highest bidder wins but only
has to pay the second highest bid. This strange-sounding rule is all it
takes to persuade the keenest bidder to tell the truth about the real
value he places on the prize. EBay uses a similar rule.
Although Hurwicz studied with the greats of the field - including
Nicholas Kaldor at the LSE, and Paul Samuelson - he never had an
economics degree. "Whatever economics I learned, I learned by listening
and learning," he said, after winning the Nobel prize.
A warm and charming man, he had an impish wit. Once, a seminar speaker
wrote an equation on the board, declared that the proof was "obvious"
and stared around, daring anyone to challenge him. "Is that proof by
intimidation?" Hurwicz quipped.
He joined the faculty of the University of Minnesota in 1951 and stayed
there all his working life, even as his reputation outstripped the
department's. "Self- promotion was completely alien to him," said John
Roberts, a professor at Stanford. "He could have moved and he chose not
to."
He travelled widely, spending time as a visiting professor at many
universities, including stints in Bangalore, Tokyo and Beijing. A
long-time member of the Minnesota Democrats, he supported the
anti-Vietnam war candidacy of Eugene McCarthy and sat as a delegate at
the party's national convention in 1968. He remained involved in the
party up until his death.
Some felt he should have won the Nobel prize sooner. He was not
outwardly perturbed. "I never had the impression that the wait bothered
him," said Eric Maskin, who shared the prize with Hurwicz and Roger
Myerson.
He is survived by his wife, Evelyn Jensen - they married in 1944 - and
their two sons and two daughters.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008