Who are the awardees for the Nobel Prize in Economics 2025?

The three recipients come from distinguished academic backgrounds and have made path-breaking contributions over several decades.

Joel Mokyr is an economic historian at Northwestern University, USA. Originally from the Netherlands and educated in Israel and the US, Mokyr is widely regarded as one of the most influential scholars on the economic history of Europe. His work focuses on the role of culture, ideas and knowledge in shaping technological and economic change.

Philippe Aghion is a French economist, currently at the Collège de France and the London School of Economics. He has worked extensively on growth theory, innovation policy, and the economics of education.

Peter Howitt, a Canadian economist and Professor Emeritus at Brown University, USA, has collaborated closely with Aghion for decades. Together, they have reshaped the way economists think about innovation as the central driver of modern economies.

Peter Howitt a professor at Brown University who has won the 2025 Nobel economics prize alongside Joel Mokyr of Northwestern University and Philippe Aghion of the College de France and INSEAD and at the London School of Economics and Political Science, poses in a photograph taken in 2013.   Ashley McCabe/Brown University/Handout via REUTERS.

Peter Howitt a professor at Brown University who has won the 2025 Nobel economics prize alongside Joel Mokyr of Northwestern University and Philippe Aghion of the College de France and INSEAD and at the London School of Economics and Political Science, poses in a photograph taken in 2013. Ashley McCabe/Brown University/Handout via REUTERS. | Photo Credit: Ashley McCabe/Brown University

What was the work for which the award was given?

The 2025 Nobel Prize for Economics recognises their complementary contributions to explaining how innovation fuels long-term economic growth.

Mokyr’s research examines the historical roots of innovation, particularly during Europe’s Industrial Revolution. He argues that the transformation was not just about material resources or institutions, but about a cultural shift towards scientific inquiry, curiosity, and the open exchange of ideas. This intellectual climate allowed knowledge to accumulate and spread, enabling sustained technological progress.

Aghion and Howitt developed the modern “Schumpeterian growth theory”, named after economist Joseph Schumpeter’s concept of “creative destruction”. Their model shows how firms innovate to gain temporary advantages, leading to cycles where new technologies replace old ones, driving productivity and growth. Their later work explored how education systems, competition, regulation and state policy can accelerate or slow down this innovation process.

Together, their work offers both a historical understanding of how innovation cultures emerge and a formal economic model of how innovation translates into growth.

What motivated their study, and how does it build on earlier growth theories like Solow’s?

A key question in economics has always been what drives long-term growth. The Solow model (1950s) showed that capital and labour explain part of growth, but treated technological progress as an external factor, leaving its origins unexplained.

Mokyr, Aghion and Howitt sought to bring innovation inside the model, examining its cultural, institutional and economic drivers. Mokyr looked to history to understand why innovation flourishes, while Aghion and Howitt modelled how incentives, competition and policy shape technological change. Their work provides a post-Solow explanation in which innovation is endogenous, systematic and central to economic growth.

The Nobel Prize in Economics 2025 is awarded to Joel Mokyr, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, U.S., Philippe Aghion, College de France and INSEAD, Paris, France, and The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK, and Peter Howitt, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, U.S., The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences 2025, is presented during a press conference at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm, Sweden on Monday 13 October 2025. Professor John Hassler, Chairman of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, Hans Ellegren, Permanent Secretary of the Academy of Sciences and Professor Kerstin Enflo, Member of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel. Anders Wiklund/TT News Agency/via REUTERS

The Nobel Prize in Economics 2025 is awarded to Joel Mokyr, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, U.S., Philippe Aghion, College de France and INSEAD, Paris, France, and The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK, and Peter Howitt, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, U.S., The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences 2025, is presented during a press conference at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm, Sweden on Monday 13 October 2025. Professor John Hassler, Chairman of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, Hans Ellegren, Permanent Secretary of the Academy of Sciences and Professor Kerstin Enflo, Member of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel. Anders Wiklund/TT News Agency/via REUTERS | Photo Credit: ANDERS WIKLUND/TT

Why is the work relevant in the current context?

Their research offers crucial insights as the world faces slowing productivity growth.

It shows why encouraging innovation is essential for sustained growth, especially in economies that can no longer rely on capital accumulation alone. It provides governments with policy tools, from supporting education and research to ensuring healthy competition, to nurture innovation ecosystems.

Mokyr’s emphasis on knowledge and culture reminds policymakers that fostering innovation is not just about money, but about creating environments where ideas can flourish. As economies undergo rapid technological change, their frameworks help explain how to manage the disruptions of creative destruction while sustaining growth.

How long have the awardees been working on this?

Joel Mokyr began his work on the cultural and intellectual history of economic growth in the 1970s, publishing widely on European economic history over the following decades.

Aghion and Howitt published their landmark paper on Schumpeterian growth in 1992, and have since expanded the theory through decades of research on innovation, institutions, and growth policy.

Collectively, their work spans over 40 years of sustained academic contributions, influencing both theory and policy.

What are the other significant works that have received the Nobel in economics in recent times?

In recent years, the Nobel Prize in Economics has often recognised contributions related to real-world economic challenges. In 2023, Claudia Goldin won for her work on the history and drivers of gender gaps in the labour market.

In 2022, Ben Bernanke, Douglas Diamond and Philip Dybvig were honoured for research on banks and financial crises. In 2019 the prize was awarded to Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Duflo, and Michael Kremer for their experimental approach to alleviating global poverty.

What is the prize money that each awardee will receive?

The total Nobel Prize amount this year is 11 million Swedish kronor (SEK), approximately $1.2 million. Joel Mokyr will receive half the amount at $600,000, while Aghion and Howitt will share the other half equally at $300,000 each.

Beyond the monetary value, the Nobel remains the most prestigious recognition in the field of economics, cementing their place among the most influential economic thinkers of the modern era

Published on October 14, 2025