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Groningen Growth and Development Centre
Faculty of Economics and Business
Groningen Growth and Development Centre
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Nobel Prize 2024 Awarded for Groundbreaking Work on Institutions and Prosperity

Date:14 October 2024
Average world income, year 1–2022
Average world income, year 1–2022

The 2024 Nobel Prize in Economics has been awarded to Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson for their pioneering studies on how institutions are formed and how they affect prosperity. Their work seeks to answer a fundamental question: Why are some countries rich while others remain poor? The laureates have shown that differences in countries' prosperity often stem from institutions introduced during colonization. Institutions are the rules of the games in politics and economies, and they found that in poorer colonies, inclusive institutions were more common, leading to long-term growth. In contrast, wealthier colonies often had extractive institutions, which contributed to their decline in prosperity. This explains why some formerly rich colonies are now poor, and vice versa. Much of the inspiration for this inquiry comes from the groundbreaking research on measuring long-run development by Angus Maddison. Indeed, both Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson have previously given the Maddison Lecture in Economic History and Development.

Maddison, whose legacy is carried on by the Maddison Project and the Groningen Growth and Development Centre, devoted his career to collecting and analyzing scarce data to make useful comparisons of living standards across more than 2,000 years. Thanks to his work, we can trace "history’s hockey stick"—the worldwide historical real GDP per capita from Roman times to the present. His contributions provide the foundational data that shape our understanding of economic history and global development.

The latest iteration of the Maddison Project Database, published in 2024 in the Journal of Economic Surveys (read more here), not only incorporates new time series data on GDP per capita for many countries but also refines the original Maddison methodology. This makes it the most robust dataset for studying long-run economic growth and income differences on a global scale.

This newest release shows that, while pockets of economic growth existed before 1820, the global economy only truly began to accelerate after that year. Over the period from 1820 to 2020, the average global standard of living (GDP per capita) increased by an astonishing 1,271 percent. This marks one of the most profound shifts in human history, rivaling the transition from hunter-gatherer to agrarian societies.

At the same time, income differences between countries have expanded enormously. In 1820, the average income in the richest country in the world was five times higher than in the poorest country. Today, the income in the richest country is about 135 times higher than the average income in the poorest country. The Nobel Prize Committee motivated the laureates by stating that “Reducing the vast differences in income between countries is one of our time’s greatest challenges. The laureates have demonstrated the importance of societal institutions for achieving this.” It is due to the work of Angus Maddison and the Maddison Project that we know how large (and increasing) these income differences are.