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  1. 21. Feb. 2017 · James Mirrlees was trained as a mathematician at Edinburgh and then Cambridge where he switched to economics. His early work was on continuous time growth models. After moving to Oxford, he applied these techniques to optimal taxation of income and commodities, the former of which merited the Nobel Prize in 1996.

  2. 25. Jan. 2019 · Sir James Mirrlees, co-recipient of the 1996 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, passed away in August 2018. This column outlines how his work has transformed economists’ understanding of their discipline – from the principles of tax design to the theory of contracts and beyond. By conceiving of policy questions in terms of information asymmetries between governments and taxpayers ...

  3. Professor Sir James Mirrlees • 1936 - 2018. Email: Peter.Tregear@unimelb.edu.au or. Daniel.Atherton@Parliament.uk. Biographical information and tributes in honour of the Nobel Prize-winning Economist, the late Sir James Mirrlees.

  4. 29. Aug. 2018 · James Mirrlees (born July 5, 1936, Minnigaff, Scotland—died August 29, 2018, Cambridge, England) was a Scottish economist known for his analytic research on economic incentives in situations involving incomplete, or asymmetrical, information. He shared the 1996 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences with William Vickrey of Columbia University.

  5. The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1996 was awarded jointly to James A. Mirrlees and William Vickrey "for their fundamental contributions to the economic theory of incentives under asymmetric information"

  6. 4. Sept. 2018 · Sept. 4, 2018. James A. Mirrlees, who taught himself calculus as a teenager, became a college professor when he was 32 and received a Nobel award for solving one of government’s greatest ...

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