The Nobel Prize and the India connection
October 10, 2013  14:49
The Washington Post reports: Some years ago, the economist George Akerlof found himself faced with a simple task: mailing a box of clothes from India, where he was living, to the United States. The clothes belonged to his friend and colleague Joseph Stiglitz, who had left them behind when visiting, so Akerlof was eager to send the box off. But there was a problem. The combination of Indian bureaucracy and what Akerlof called "my own ineptitude in such matters" meant that doing so was going to be a hassle -- indeed, he estimated that it would take an entire workday.

So he put off dealing with it, week after week. This went on for more than eight months, and it was only shortly before Akerlof himself returned home that he managed to solve his problem: another friend happened to be sending some things back to the US, and Akerlof was able to add Stiglitz's clothes to the shipment. Given the vagaries of intercontinental mail, it's possible that Akerlof made it back to the States before Stiglitz's shirts did.

Professor Akerlof and Professor Stiglitz shared the Nobel Prize in 2001. Professor Akerlof's wife is now the Fed Chairman-designate, Professor Janet Yellen.
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