Free exchange | Economics

The Nobel prize goes to Jean Tirole

Jean Tirole of Toulouse University in France wins the Nobel prize for economics

By C.R. | LONDON

AFTER last year's three-way split, this year's Sveriges Riksbank prize in economic sciences in memory of Alfred Nobel goes to a single receipient, Jean Tirole of Toulouse University in France (pictured). He has been awarded the prize for his microeconomic research investigating how large firms should be regulated in order to prevent consumers being damaged by their monopolistic behaviour.

As the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences notes on its website:

Jean Tirole is one of the most influential economists of our time. He has made important theoretical research contributions in a number of areas, but most of all he has clarified how to understand and regulate industries with a few powerful firms.

Many industries are dominated by a small number of large firms or a single monopoly. Left unregulated, such markets often produce socially undesirable results—prices higher than those motivated by costs, or unproductive firms that survive by blocking the entry of new and more productive ones.

From the mid-1980s and onwards, Jean Tirole has breathed new life into research on such market failures. His analysis of firms with market power provides a unified theory with a strong bearing on central policy questions: how should the government deal with mergers or cartels, and how should it regulate monopolies?

Before Tirole, researchers and policymakers sought general principles for all industries. They advocated simple policy rules, such as capping prices for monopolists and prohibiting cooperation between competitors, while permitting cooperation between firms with different positions in the value chain. Tirole showed theoretically that such rules may work well in certain conditions, but do more harm than good in others. Price caps can provide dominant firms with strong motives to reduce costs—a good thing for society—but may also permit excessive profits—a bad thing for society. Cooperation on price setting within a market is usually harmful, but cooperation regarding patent pools can benefit everyone. The merger of a firm and its supplier may encourage innovation, but may also distort competition.

The best regulation or competition policy should therefore be carefully adapted to every industry's specific conditions. In a series of articles and books, Jean Tirole has presented a general framework for designing such policies and applied it to a number of industries, ranging from telecommunications to banking. Drawing on these new insights, governments can better encourage powerful firms to become more productive and, at the same time, prevent them from harming competitors and customers.

Unlike some previous recipients, such as Robert Engle and Clive Granger in 2003 or Lars Peter Hansen in 2013, who won the prize for developing new econometric methods few laymen can easily understand, Mr Tirole's research has direct relevance to current policy issues. Most notably, his ideas of how to regulate industries dominated by a single large firm are helping to produce strategies for how to prevent Google from using its vast market share in the internet-search business to behave as a monopoly. And as we argued back in March, Mr Tirole's theories can also help us understand the impact on markets of disruptive forces such as Uber, a taxi app that matches customers and drivers. For those readers who want to read more about Jean Tirole's research and his career in more detail, here are some links that may be of interest:

From economist.com:

Pricing the surge: The microeconomics of Uber's attempt to revolutionise taxi markets (March 2014).

Making pay work: Why bosses should be careful when using performance-related pay (May 2013).

Microeconomics: A golden age of micro (October 2012).

Looking good by doing good: Rewarding people for their generosity may be counterproductive (January 2009).

Beyond irrelevance: Why companies' financial structure matters after all (February 2006).

Matchmakers and trustbusters: "Two-sided" industries intrigue economists and incite regulators (December 2005)

Journey beyond the stars: The brightest young economists are outgrowing their discipline's traditional boundaries (December 1998).

From elsewhere on the internet:

Mr Tirole's university homepage

A full list of Mr Tirole's publications

A 54-page document from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences explaining why Mr Tirole won this year's prize

Discover more

Religious competition was to blame for Europe’s witch hunts

Many children are still persecuted as alleged witches in Africa for similar reasons

Has BRICS lived up to expectations?

The bloc of big emerging economies is surprisingly good at keeping its promises


How to interpret a market plunge

Whether a sudden sharp decline in asset prices amounts to a meaningless blip or something more depends on mass psychology