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PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (March 24, 2020) – The American Academy of Political and Social Science (AAPSS) will award the 2020 Daniel Patrick Moynihan Prize to economist William Nordhaus. The Moynihan Prize is awarded annually to a leading policy-maker, social scientist, or public intellectual whose career demonstrates the value of using research and evidence to improve the human condition.

“I am most honored to receive the Moynihan prize from the American Academy of Political and Social Science,” Nordhaus stated. “Pat Moynihan was the rarest of scholars, combining brilliant analysis, political engagement, and sheer bravery. He stands as a beacon in these dark times for those in the educational and public sphere who search for new truths while defending the best from the past.”

Nordhaus’s pioneering work has been foundational to worldwide efforts to address climate change. He was the first macroeconomist to take seriously the notion that climate can be influenced by human behavior and that human action and economic policy can influence climate.  He has developed influential models that examine the consequences of climate policy interventions on the global economy. Since the 1970s, Nordhaus has argued that tax policy is the most effective remedy to the pollution that causes global warming.

To assess the costs of climate change, Nordhaus developed an economic model in the mid-1990s that he called the Dynamic Integrated Climate-Economy model, or DICE—a name that he chose to allude to the idea that, in his words, “we are gambling with the future of our planet.” This model remains the industry standard, used by bodies around the world to understand options to address climate change.

Nordhaus was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 2018. In making its award, the committee observed, “At its heart, economics deals with the management of scarce resources. 
 William Nordhaus’ findings deal with interactions between society, the economy and climate change,” noting that Nordhaus has “brought us considerably closer to answering the question of how we can achieve sustained and sustainable global economic growth.”

Nordhaus studied at Yale University as an undergraduate and completed his PhD in Economics in 1967 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has been a professor at Yale University since 1973. He has been a member of the Brookings Panel on Economic Activity since 1972, and from 1977 to 1979 he was an economic advisor to President Jimmy Carter’s administration.

“Nobelist Bill Nordhaus is an easy choice for this year’s Moynihan Award,” said AAPSS President Kenneth Prewitt. “Moynihan was an early and powerful voice on issues that the nation’s leaders were not yet taking seriously. After decades of warnings from natural scientists, the country needed a social science voice alerting us that climate change was coming after our society and economy. Nordhaus has been that early and powerful voice, bringing the climate alarm from the science section to the front page.”

Previous Moynihan Prize recipients include John Holdren, former director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy; economist and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz; sociologist William Julius Wilson; domestic policy analysts Isabell Sawhill and Ron Haskins of the Brookings Institution (who won the Prize jointly in 2016); and Samantha Power, former US Ambassador to the United Nations. A full list of Prize recipients can be found on the AAPSS website.

Nordhaus will give a public lecture to mark the award; details to come.

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CONTACT:
Tom Kecskemethy, Executive Director
The American Academy of Political and Social Science
Tel: (215)746-7321, Email: thomask@upenn.edu

The American Academy of Political and Social Science, based in Philadelphia, is one of the nation’s oldest learned societies, dedicated to bringing evidence from the social sciences to bear in public policy debates and in public discourse. The Moynihan Prize was created to honor the legacy of the late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who championed the use of rigorous social science in service of the public good.

William Nordhaus’s Moynihan Lecture will be cosponsored by Sage Publications.

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