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Yes, I think it's a great honour because as you say you know the recton valve
prize is a European prize so it shows that the work I have been doing you
know in the United States, about the United States, has also had an
impact beyond the borders of the United States and in particular in Europe, so it
It shows that the work I've been doing
has been influential worldwide.
General
So, my research is about
inequality and public policy.
So, as we know, market economies
generate inequality,
but also a lot of economic growth,
so I have been documenting changes
in inequality over time and across countries
focusing particularly on top incomes,
and in particular the work
that I'm most known for is documenting
the enormous mon bandwidths increased
in income concentration in the US
over the last 30 years.
jako a amigo ol Palestine, oder um makes você a umура deiloso da planners querotas.
So, I have not worked myself on Germany on the side of itself,
but I have talked to and perhaps influenced some scholars who have worked in Germany.
About inequality, one of our team, Fabian Dell,
that augmented the change in inequality in Germany and the concentration in income over a century.
I will talk a little bit about this tonight.
More generally, some of the work I've been doing about the US has inspired scholars in Germany
to do similar studies in a German context, and actually during my visit here I've had the opportunity
to talk to colleagues, professors,
at this university who've told me
about the fascinating work that they've been doing
about Germany that relates to some of the work
I've been doing oftentimes, you know, in the US context.
Perry who received his certificate
of
Well, I don't know, it's true that when you look
the list of past winners. It was a very impressive list that's why I felt it was an enormous
honor for me to win the prize. At the same time, I feel like I'm still a very young
scholar, you know I'm 42 and the Nobel Prize in websites has never been given to anybody
below 50 something. So it's very hard to forecast what will happen, and I want to trust
the judgement
you know, of the people who decide
on the prize they've had
astonishing
good judgement
in choosing scholars
Presenters
Prof. Emmanuel Saez
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2014-12-09
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2014-12-16 09:37:46
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The H.C. Recktenwald Prize, with a value of 25.000 €, ranks among the highest awards honouring academic economists and is conferred on scholars with outstanding contributions and achievements in the field of economics.
The first award ceremony took place in 1995 and was endowed by Hertha Recktenwald, wife of Por.f Horst Claus Recktenwald, a german economist.
There are currently five Prize Winners, all world-famous economists, three of whom were later awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.
Emmanuel Saez is Professor of Economics at University of California, Berkeley. He has made pathbreaking contributions to the analysis of public policy, in particular to taxation and redistribution.
His research includes empirical studies on behavioral effects of taxation as well as theoretical contributions to the optimal design of tax systems.