Paul Romer: Difference between revisions

The neutral encyclopedia of notable people
Content engine: create biography for Paul Romer (2945 words)
 
Content engine: create biography for Paul Romer (3238 words) [update]
 
Line 5: Line 5:
| birth_place = Denver, Colorado, U.S.
| birth_place = Denver, Colorado, U.S.
| nationality = American
| nationality = American
| occupation = Economist, academic, policy entrepreneur
| occupation = Economist, academic
| known_for = Endogenous growth theory, charter cities concept, "mathiness" critique
| known_for = Endogenous growth theory, charter cities concept, "mathiness" critique
| education = University of Chicago (B.S., Ph.D.)<br>Queen's University<br>Massachusetts Institute of Technology
| education = University of Chicago (B.S.)<br>Massachusetts Institute of Technology<br>Queen's University<br>University of Chicago (Ph.D.)
| employer = Boston College
| employer = Boston College
| title = Seidner University Professor in Finance
| title = Seidner University Professor in Finance
| awards = Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2018)
| awards = Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2018)
| website = {{URL|paulromer.net}}
| website = [http://paulromer.net/ paulromer.net]
}}
}}


'''Paul Michael Romer''' (born November 7, 1955) is an American economist and policy entrepreneur who holds the position of Seidner University Professor in Finance at Boston College. He is best known for his foundational contributions to '''endogenous growth theory''', which transformed economists' understanding of how technological innovation and the accumulation of ideas drive long-run economic growth. For this work, Romer was awarded the 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, shared with climate economist William Nordhaus, "for integrating technological innovations into long-run macroeconomic analysis."<ref name="cepr">{{cite web |title=New ideas about new ideas: Paul Romer, Nobel laureate |url=https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/new-ideas-about-new-ideas-paul-romer-nobel-laureate |publisher=CEPR |date=2018-10-12 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Romer's career has spanned appointments at several leading universities, including Stanford University, the University of Chicago, the University of California, Berkeley, the University of Rochester, and New York University, as well as a stint as Chief Economist of the World Bank from October 2016 to January 2018.<ref name="reuters">{{cite news |title=World Bank economist Paul Romer quits after Chile comments |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-worldbank-economist-romer/world-bank-economist-paul-romer-quits-after-chile-comments-idUSKBN1FD38Y |work=Reuters |date=2018-01-24 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Beyond academic economics, Romer has engaged in entrepreneurship and public advocacy, proposing the concept of "charter cities" as a mechanism for institutional reform in the developing world and coining the term "mathiness" to critique what he viewed as the misuse of mathematics in economic research. His oft-quoted aphorism—"Growth springs from better recipes, not just from more cooking"—encapsulates a career devoted to understanding how new ideas generate prosperity.<ref name="et_quote">{{cite news |title=Wealth Quote of the Day by Paul M. Romer |url=https://m.economictimes.com/news/international/us/wealth-quote-of-the-day-by-paul-m-romer-growth-springs-from-better-recipes-not-just-from-more-cooking-what-nobel-laureate-paul-romer-got-right-about-innovation-and-modern-wealth-creation/articleshow/126809102.cms |work=The Economic Times |date=2025-01 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
'''Paul Michael Romer''' (born November 7, 1955) is an American economist and policy entrepreneur who holds the position of Seidner University Professor in Finance at Boston College.<ref name="bc2023">{{cite web |title=Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Romer to join Boston College as the Seidner University Professor |url=https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/bcnews/campus-community/announcements/Nobel-Prize-winning-economist-Paul-Romer-joins-Boston-College.html |publisher=Boston College |date=May 3, 2023 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> He is best known for his foundational contributions to [[endogenous growth theory]], which fundamentally reshaped how economists understand the role of ideas, innovation, and technological change in driving long-run economic growth. For this work, Romer was awarded the 2018 [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences]], shared with [[William Nordhaus]], "for integrating technological innovations into long-run macroeconomic analysis."<ref name="cepr">{{cite web |title=New ideas about new ideas: Paul Romer, Nobel laureate |url=https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/new-ideas-about-new-ideas-paul-romer-nobel-laureate |publisher=CEPR |date=October 12, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Over a career spanning more than four decades, Romer has held positions at several leading universities, including the University of Chicago, Stanford University, the University of California, Berkeley, the University of Rochester, and New York University. He served as Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of the [[World Bank]] from October 2016 until January 2018.<ref name="reuters">{{cite news |title=World Bank economist Paul Romer quits after Chile comments |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-worldbank-economist-romer/world-bank-economist-paul-romer-quits-after-chile-comments-idUSKBN1FD38Y |work=Reuters |date=January 24, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Beyond academic economics, Romer has engaged in policy entrepreneurship, most notably through his advocacy of "charter cities" as a mechanism for institutional reform in the developing world, and through his critiques of what he termed "mathiness" in economic research. During the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], he emerged as a prominent voice advocating for large-scale testing as an economic recovery strategy.<ref name="newyorker">{{cite news |last=Chotiner |first=Isaac |title=Paul Romer's Case for Nationwide Coronavirus Testing |url=https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/paul-romer-on-how-to-survive-the-chaos-of-the-coronavirus |work=The New Yorker |date=May 3, 2020 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Paul Michael Romer was born on November 7, 1955, in Denver, Colorado. He grew up in a political family; his father, Roy Romer, served as the 39th Governor of Colorado from 1987 to 1999 and later became superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District. This early exposure to public policy and governance would shape Paul Romer's later interest in the intersection of economics and institutional design.
Paul Michael Romer was born on November 7, 1955, in Denver, Colorado. He grew up in a politically active family; his father, Roy Romer, served as the 39th Governor of Colorado from 1987 to 1999 and later became superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District. This background in public service and policy would later influence Paul Romer's own engagement with policy entrepreneurship beyond the traditional confines of academic economics.


Romer attended Phillips Exeter Academy, one of the oldest and most selective preparatory schools in the United States, before pursuing higher education.<ref name="bc_announce">{{cite web |title=Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Romer to join Boston College as the Seidner University Professor |url=https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/bcnews/campus-community/announcements/Nobel-Prize-winning-economist-Paul-Romer-joins-Boston-College.html |publisher=Boston College |date=2023-05-03 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His intellectual trajectory led him through several institutions during his formative academic years.
Romer attended [[Phillips Exeter Academy]], one of the oldest and most selective preparatory schools in the United States, located in Exeter, New Hampshire. The rigorous academic environment at Phillips Exeter provided a strong foundation for his subsequent academic pursues.


== Education ==
== Education ==


Romer began his undergraduate studies at the University of Chicago, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics. He subsequently spent time at Queen's University in Canada and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before returning to the University of Chicago for his doctoral studies in economics. At Chicago, Romer worked under the supervision of José Scheinkman and Robert Lucas Jr., the latter of whom was himself a Nobel laureate known for his contributions to macroeconomic theory, including the Lucas critique and rational expectations theory. Romer also received academic mentorship from Russell Davidson and Ivar Ekeland.<ref name="cepr" />
Romer pursued his undergraduate studies at the [[University of Chicago]], where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree. He subsequently undertook graduate studies at multiple institutions. He spent time at [[Queen's University]] in Kingston, Ontario, where he worked with academic advisors Russell Davidson and Ivar Ekeland. He also studied at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] before returning to the University of Chicago for his doctoral work.<ref name="cepr" />


Romer completed his Ph.D. in economics at the University of Chicago in 1983 with a dissertation titled ''Dynamic Competitive Equilibria with Externalities, Increasing Returns and Unbounded Growth'', which laid the groundwork for the endogenous growth theory that would define his career.<ref>{{cite web |title=Dynamic competitive equilibria with externalities, increasing returns and unbounded growth (doctoral thesis) |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/303206758/ |publisher=ProQuest |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The dissertation addressed a fundamental challenge in economic theory: how to model economies in which growth was driven not by exogenous factors but by the internal dynamics of knowledge creation and technological change.
At the University of Chicago, Romer completed his Ph.D. in economics in 1983 under the supervision of [[José Scheinkman]] and [[Robert Lucas Jr.]], the latter himself a Nobel laureate known for his contributions to macroeconomics and rational expectations theory. Romer's doctoral dissertation, titled "Dynamic competitive equilibria with externalities, increasing returns and unbounded growth," laid the groundwork for what would become his most significant intellectual contribution: endogenous growth theory.<ref>{{cite web |title=Dynamic competitive equilibria with externalities, increasing returns and unbounded growth |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/303206758/ |publisher=ProQuest |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The dissertation addressed a question that had long puzzled economists—how to formally model the sustained economic growth that characterized modern economies—by incorporating increasing returns and externalities into dynamic equilibrium models. The intellectual environment at the University of Chicago, with its emphasis on rigorous theoretical modeling and market-based approaches to economic analysis, profoundly shaped Romer's analytical framework.


== Career ==
== Career ==


=== Early Academic Career and Endogenous Growth Theory ===
=== Early Academic Career and the Development of Endogenous Growth Theory ===


Following his doctoral work, Romer joined the faculty of the University of Rochester before moving to the University of Chicago and then to the University of California, Berkeley. It was during this period that he produced the two seminal papers that would eventually earn him the Nobel Prize.
After completing his doctorate, Romer began his academic career at the [[University of Rochester]], where he served as a faculty member. It was during this period and the years immediately following that he developed and published the work that would define his career and ultimately earn him the Nobel Prize.


In 1986, Romer published "Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth" in the ''Journal of Political Economy'', a paper that introduced a model of economic growth in which the accumulation of knowledge by forward-looking, profit-maximizing agents served as the primary engine of long-run growth.<ref>{{cite web |title=Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1833190 |publisher=JSTOR (Journal of Political Economy) |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The paper challenged the prevailing neoclassical growth framework associated with Robert Solow, which treated technological change as an exogenous variable—something that happened to an economy from outside the model rather than arising from within it.
The central problem Romer addressed was one of the most fundamental in economics: why do some economies grow and others stagnate? The dominant models of economic growth in the mid-twentieth century, particularly the [[Solow growth model]] developed by Robert Solow in the 1950s, treated technological progress as an exogenous factor—something that happened outside the model and was not explained by economic forces. While Solow's framework elegantly demonstrated that capital accumulation alone could not sustain long-run growth (due to diminishing returns), it left the most important driver of sustained growth—technological change—unexplained.


In 1990, Romer published a second landmark paper, "Endogenous Technological Change," in the ''Journal of Political Economy''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Endogenous Technological Change |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2937632 |publisher=JSTOR (Journal of Political Economy) |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This paper formalized a model in which technological progress resulted from intentional research and development activities undertaken by firms seeking to earn monopoly rents from their innovations. The model incorporated three key features: the non-rival nature of ideas (one person's use of an idea does not diminish another's ability to use it), the partially excludable character of technological knowledge (through patents and intellectual property), and the role of human capital in the production of new ideas. These features meant that the economy exhibited increasing returns to scale, a departure from the constant-returns assumption of standard competitive models.
Romer's key insight was to develop models in which technological change arose endogenously from the purposeful actions of economic agents. In his seminal 1986 paper, "Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth," published in the ''Journal of Political Economy'', Romer presented a model in which knowledge accumulation by firms generated economy-wide increasing returns.<ref>{{cite web |title=Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1833190 |publisher=JSTOR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The model showed how the aggregate stock of knowledge, generated as a by-product of individual firms' investment decisions, could drive sustained per capita growth. This paper represented a significant departure from the neoclassical growth framework and helped launch what became known as "new growth theory" or "endogenous growth theory."


Romer's endogenous growth theory had profound implications for economic policy. If ideas and knowledge were the primary drivers of growth, then government policies affecting education, intellectual property rights, research and development subsidies, and openness to trade in ideas could have permanent effects on economic growth rates—not merely on the level of output, as the Solow model suggested.<ref name="cepr" /> As the Centre for Economic Policy Research noted upon Romer's Nobel award, his work demonstrated how "economic forces govern the willingness of firms to produce new ideas and innovations," thereby "integrating technological innovations into long-run macroeconomic analysis."<ref name="cepr" />
Romer further developed these ideas in his 1990 paper, "Endogenous Technological Change," published in the ''Journal of Political Economy''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Endogenous Technological Change |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2937632 |publisher=JSTOR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This paper introduced a more fully specified model in which profit-maximizing firms intentionally invested in research and development to create new ideas. A critical feature of Romer's framework was the treatment of ideas as nonrival goods—once an idea is created, it can be used by many people simultaneously without being depleted, unlike physical goods. However, because ideas are at least partially excludable through mechanisms such as patents, firms can capture enough of the returns from innovation to justify their R&D investments.


Romer also contributed other notable work during this period, publishing in leading journals. His research appeared in outlets including the ''American Economic Review'', the ''Brookings Papers on Economic Activity'', and the ''Quarterly Journal of Economics''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Crazy Explanations for the Productivity Slowdown |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/116846 |publisher=JSTOR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=New Goods, Old Theory, and the Welfare Costs of Trade Restrictions |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2534564 |publisher=JSTOR (Brookings Papers on Economic Activity) |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Growth Based on Increasing Returns Due to Specialization |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/1912842 |publisher=JSTOR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
This framework had profound implications. As Romer articulated in a phrase that has become widely quoted: "Growth springs from better recipes, not just from more cooking."<ref name="econlib">{{cite web |title=Economic Growth |url=https://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/EconomicGrowth.html |publisher=The Library of Economics and Liberty |date=June 29, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Wealth Quote of the Day by Paul M. Romer |url=https://m.economictimes.com/news/international/us/wealth-quote-of-the-day-by-paul-m-romer-growth-springs-from-better-recipes-not-just-from-more-cooking-what-nobel-laureate-paul-romer-got-right-about-innovation-and-modern-wealth-creation/articleshow/126809102.cms |work=The Economic Times |date=January 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Economic growth, in Romer's view, was not primarily about accumulating more physical inputs—more labor, more capital, more raw materials—but about discovering new and better ways to combine existing resources. The implication was that policies affecting education, research incentives, intellectual property protection, and openness to new ideas could have lasting effects on an economy's growth rate, not merely its level of output.


In 1997, ''Time'' magazine recognized Romer as one of America's 25 most influential people, reflecting the broad impact of his ideas on both academic economics and public discourse about economic growth and innovation policy.<ref>{{cite web |title=America's 25 Most Influential People |url=http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,986206-10,00.html |publisher=Time |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
Romer also made contributions to the analysis of economic growth through other published works, including articles examining the relationship between trade and growth, and the role of human capital.<ref>{{cite web |title= |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2937946 |publisher=JSTOR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title= |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/116846 |publisher=JSTOR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title= |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2534564 |publisher=JSTOR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


=== Stanford and "Mathiness" ===
=== Positions at Stanford, Berkeley, Chicago, and NYU ===


Romer held a faculty position at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business, where he continued to develop his ideas on growth and innovation. During his time at Stanford, he was affiliated with several research centers, including the Stanford Center for International Development, the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, and the Hoover Institution. He was also a researcher at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
Over the course of his career, Romer held faculty positions at several of the most prominent economics departments and business schools in the United States. After his initial appointment at the University of Rochester, he moved to the [[University of Chicago]], where the intellectual tradition of the Chicago school of economics intersected with his own training. He also held positions at the [[University of California, Berkeley]] and at [[Stanford University]]'s Graduate School of Business, where he was affiliated with the Center for International Development, the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, and the [[Hoover Institution]].


In 2015, Romer introduced the term "mathiness" in a paper published in the ''American Economic Review''. The concept described what Romer saw as a troubling tendency among some economists to use mathematical formalism not to clarify economic arguments but to obscure them—deploying impressive-looking equations that lacked clear empirical content or made assumptions disconnected from the verbal claims accompanying them. Romer argued that mathiness had become a tool for advancing ideological positions under the guise of scientific rigor, and he singled out specific prominent economists whose work he believed exemplified the problem. The critique generated significant discussion within the economics profession regarding standards of theoretical argumentation and the relationship between mathematical models and economic insight.
Romer subsequently joined [[New York University]] (NYU), where he served as a professor of economics. At NYU, he founded the Marron Institute of Urban Management, reflecting his growing interest in urbanization and governance. He also served as a researcher at the [[National Bureau of Economic Research]] and was a fellow at the [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]] and the [[Center for Global Development]].
 
In 1997, ''Time'' magazine recognized Romer as one of America's 25 most influential people, reflecting the impact his ideas about economic growth had achieved beyond the academic community.<ref>{{cite web |title=America's 25 Most Influential People |url=http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,986206-10,00.html |publisher=Time |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


=== Charter Cities ===
=== Charter Cities ===


Beginning in the late 2000s, Romer became a prominent advocate for the concept of "charter cities"—a proposal for creating new urban zones in developing countries that would operate under a set of rules or a charter different from those governing the rest of the host country. The idea drew on Romer's growth theory insight that institutions and rules matter for economic development, and posited that creating new institutional environments from scratch might be easier than reforming existing ones.
In the late 2000s and early 2010s, Romer became a prominent advocate for the concept of "charter cities"—a proposal to create new cities in developing countries governed under a charter that would import institutional rules and governance frameworks from more developed nations. The idea drew on Romer's growth theory by extending the logic of institutional reform: just as better "recipes" for production drive economic growth, better institutional "rules" could accelerate development.


Romer argued that charter cities could provide a voluntary path to better governance: residents would choose to move to a charter city, and the host country could adopt successful rules more broadly if the experiment proved fruitful.<ref>{{cite web |title=Can Charter Cities Change the World? A Q&A With Paul Romer |url=http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/29/can-charter-cities-change-the-world-a-qa-with-paul-romer/ |publisher=The New York Times (Freakonomics blog) |date=2009-09-29 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The concept drew both interest and criticism. Supporters saw it as a creative approach to the intractable problems of governance in the developing world, while critics raised concerns about sovereignty, the potential for exploitation, and the practicality of the proposal.
Romer argued that charter cities would allow developing nations to bypass entrenched institutional problems by creating zones of good governance that could serve as models for broader reform. The concept attracted significant attention and debate. In a 2009 interview with ''The New York Times'' Freakonomics blog, Romer discussed the potential for charter cities to transform economic development.<ref>{{cite web |title=Can Charter Cities Change the World? A Q&A with Paul Romer |url=http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/29/can-charter-cities-change-the-world-a-qa-with-paul-romer/ |publisher=The New York Times |date=September 29, 2009 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Romer engaged with the government of Honduras, which in 2011 passed legislation enabling the creation of special development regions. However, the project encountered significant political and legal obstacles, and Romer eventually withdrew from his advisory role in 2012, citing concerns about transparency and the rule of law in the implementation process.<ref>{{cite news |title=Charter City Plan to Fight Honduras Poverty Loses Initiator |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/01/world/americas/charter-city-plan-to-fight-honduras-poverty-loses-initiator.html |work=The New York Times |date=2012-10-01 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
The concept moved from theory toward practice when Honduras, one of the poorest countries in Central America, expressed interest in implementing a version of the charter city idea. The Honduran government passed legislation to create special development regions that would operate under different governance rules. Romer served as an advisor to the project. However, the initiative encountered significant political and legal obstacles. In 2012, Romer withdrew from the Honduras project, citing concerns about transparency and the governance of the process.<ref>{{cite news |title=Charter City Plan to Fight Honduras Poverty Loses Initiator |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/01/world/americas/charter-city-plan-to-fight-honduras-poverty-loses-initiator.html |work=The New York Times |date=October 1, 2012 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Honduran Supreme Court subsequently struck down portions of the original legislation, though modified versions of the special economic zones continued in various forms.


=== World Bank Chief Economist ===
Despite the setbacks in Honduras, the charter cities concept continued to generate discussion among economists and development practitioners. The idea highlighted the importance of institutional frameworks and governance quality in economic development—themes that connected directly to Romer's broader intellectual contributions about the role of ideas and rules in generating economic growth.


In October 2016, Romer was appointed Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of the World Bank, succeeding Kaushik Basu in the role. As Chief Economist, Romer oversaw the Bank's research department and its flagship publications, including the ''World Development Report'' and the ''Doing Business'' report.
=== Chief Economist of the World Bank ===


Romer's tenure at the World Bank proved turbulent. He sought to reform the institution's research output, warning against the tendency of Bank staff to use reports as vehicles for advancing particular policy agendas rather than as neutral analytical products.<ref name="marginal">{{cite web |title=Why Paul Romer won the Nobel Prize in economics |url=https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2018/10/paul-romer-won-nobel-prize-economics.html |publisher=Marginal Revolution |date=2018-10-08 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His management style and reform efforts reportedly generated friction within the Bank's bureaucracy.
In October 2016, Romer was appointed Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of the [[World Bank]] under President [[Jim Yong Kim]], succeeding Kaushik Basu in the role. The appointment of a scholar of Romer's stature signaled the institution's interest in bringing fresh intellectual perspectives to its development mission.


The most significant controversy arose in January 2018 when Romer suggested that the World Bank's ''Doing Business'' rankings—which measured the ease of doing business in countries around the world—may have been manipulated for political reasons, specifically with respect to Chile's rankings. Romer noted that Chile's ranking had declined significantly during the presidency of Michelle Bachelet, a center-left leader, and suggested the methodology changes that produced this decline may not have been entirely neutral.<ref name="wsj">{{cite news |last= |first= |title=World Bank Unfairly Influenced Its Own Competitiveness Rankings |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/world-bank-unfairly-influenced-its-own-competitiveness-rankings-1515797620 |work=The Wall Street Journal |date=2018-01-12 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref name="bbc">{{cite news |title=Chile demands answers over World Bank ranking changes |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-42685172 |work=BBC News |date=2018-01-18 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
During his tenure at the World Bank, Romer sought to reform certain internal practices. He reportedly warned against the tendency of bank staff to overload reports with pet projects and messages, arguing that this practice had diluted the impact of past publications.<ref name="mr">{{cite web |title=Why Paul Romer won the Nobel Prize in economics |url=https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2018/10/paul-romer-won-nobel-prize-economics.html |publisher=Marginal Revolution |date=October 8, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


The Chilean government demanded answers from the World Bank regarding the ranking changes.<ref name="bbc" /><ref>{{cite news |title=Chile Demands Answers in World Bank Business Ranking Controversy |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-13/chile-demands-answers-in-world-bank-business-ranking-controversy |work=Bloomberg |date=2018-01-13 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Romer resigned from his position on January 24, 2018, with Shanta Devarajan succeeding him as acting Chief Economist.<ref name="reuters" /> The episode raised broader questions about the integrity and methodology of international institutional rankings.
However, Romer's tenure was cut short by a controversy surrounding the World Bank's "Doing Business" report, an influential annual publication that ranked countries on the ease of doing business within their borders. In January 2018, Romer publicly raised concerns that Chile's ranking in the report may have been subject to political manipulation, suggesting that methodological changes had unfairly penalized Chile during the tenure of its left-leaning president, Michelle Bachelet.<ref name="wsj">{{cite news |title=World Bank Unfairly Influenced Its Own Competitiveness Rankings |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/world-bank-unfairly-influenced-its-own-competitiveness-rankings-1515797620 |work=The Wall Street Journal |date=January 13, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The Chilean government demanded answers regarding the integrity of the rankings.<ref>{{cite news |title=Chile demands answers in World Bank business ranking controversy |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-42685172 |work=BBC News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Chile Demands Answers in World Bank Business Ranking Controversy |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-13/chile-demands-answers-in-world-bank-business-ranking-controversy |work=Bloomberg |date=January 13, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


=== New York University and Later Career ===
The controversy escalated rapidly, and Romer resigned from his position on January 24, 2018, after approximately fifteen months in the role.<ref name="reuters" /> He was succeeded by Shanta Devarajan as acting Chief Economist. Following his departure from the World Bank, Romer returned to his faculty position at NYU. The episode illustrated the tensions that can arise when academic economists accustomed to intellectual independence operate within large bureaucratic institutions, and it underscored the political sensitivity of international development rankings.


Romer had taken leave from his position as professor of economics at New York University's Stern School of Business upon joining the World Bank, and he returned to NYU following his departure from the Bank. In October 2018, while at NYU, Romer was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, shared with William Nordhaus of Yale University.<ref>{{cite news |title=William Nordhaus and Paul Romer Awarded Nobel in Economics for Work on Climate and Technology |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/08/business/economic-science-nobel-prize.html |work=The New York Times |date=2018-10-08 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
=== "Mathiness" Critique ===


=== Boston College ===
In 2015, Romer published a paper in the ''American Economic Review'' in which he coined the term "mathiness" to describe what he viewed as the misuse of mathematical formalism in economic research. Romer argued that some economists were using sophisticated mathematical models not to clarify economic arguments but to obscure them—dressing up weak or politically motivated claims in the language of rigorous mathematics to give them an undeserved appearance of precision and objectivity.
 
The "mathiness" critique resonated with ongoing debates within the economics profession about the appropriate role of formal modeling, the replicability of empirical results, and the relationship between theoretical elegance and empirical relevance. Romer's willingness to challenge established practices within his own profession reflected a broader concern about intellectual integrity in academic research.
 
=== COVID-19 Pandemic Response ===


In May 2023, Boston College announced that Romer would join the university as the Seidner University Professor in the Carroll School of Management's Finance Department. The appointment, described by the university as bringing "one of the most influential economists of this century" to its faculty, reflected Romer's interest in new directions for his research and teaching.<ref name="bc_announce" />
During the [[COVID-19 pandemic]] in 2020, Romer became a vocal advocate for large-scale, widespread testing as the primary strategy for reopening the economy while managing the public health crisis. In an interview with ''The New Yorker'' in May 2020, Romer argued that frequent, universal testing could allow individuals to safely return to economic activity by identifying and isolating infected persons before they could spread the virus widely.<ref name="newyorker" /> His proposals drew on economic reasoning—the costs of mass testing, he argued, were far lower than the costs of prolonged economic shutdowns. Romer also discussed the potential limitations of digital contact tracing and the resistance Americans might have to surveillance-based approaches to pandemic management.


In a 2024 profile by Boston College, Romer described his move to the institution as an opportunity to "remake" his intellectual agenda. The profile noted his continued interest in how ideas drive economic growth, while also highlighting his engagement with new questions about the role of finance, technology, and institutional design in the modern economy.<ref name="bc_profile">{{cite web |title=A Nobel Laureate Remakes Himself at Boston College |url=https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/schools/carroll-school/news/2024/Paul-Romer.html |publisher=Boston College |date=2024-07-26 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
=== Policy Advocacy on Big Tech ===


=== Public Policy Engagement ===
Romer has also been an active participant in debates about the regulation of large technology companies. In a 2021 discussion hosted by the University of Chicago, Romer argued in favor of a [[Pigouvian tax]] on digital advertising revenue that would increase with the size of the firm being levied, as a mechanism to curb market concentration in the technology sector.<ref>{{cite web |title=Nobel laureate Paul Romer on how to curb Big Tech's power |url=https://news.uchicago.edu/story/nobel-laureate-paul-romer-how-curb-big-techs-power |publisher=University of Chicago News |date=January 25, 2021 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This proposal reflected Romer's broader view that the accumulation of market power by a small number of firms posed risks to competition and innovation—the very forces that, according to his own growth theory, drive long-run economic progress.


Beyond his academic work, Romer has been an active voice on policy matters. During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, he emerged as a prominent advocate for mass testing as a strategy for managing the virus. In an interview with ''The New Yorker'', Romer argued that widespread, frequent testing—even with imperfect tests—could allow economic activity to resume safely by identifying and isolating infected individuals. He also discussed the challenges of digital contact tracing and the reasons Americans might resist such surveillance-oriented approaches.<ref>{{cite news |last=Chotiner |first=Isaac |title=Paul Romer's Case for Nationwide Coronavirus Testing |url=https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/paul-romer-on-how-to-survive-the-chaos-of-the-coronavirus |work=The New Yorker |date=2020-05-03 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
=== Boston College ===


In 2021, Romer proposed a Pigouvian tax on large technology companies as a mechanism for curbing market concentration in the digital economy. Writing and speaking on the subject, he argued that a tax that increased with a firm's size would create incentives for large technology platforms to limit their dominance and allow for greater competition. The proposal reflected Romer's broader concern with the concentration of market power and its implications for innovation and economic dynamism.<ref>{{cite web |title=Nobel laureate Paul Romer on how to curb Big Tech's power |url=https://news.uchicago.edu/story/nobel-laureate-paul-romer-how-curb-big-techs-power |publisher=University of Chicago News |date=2021-01-25 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
In May 2023, Romer joined [[Boston College]] as the Seidner University Professor in Finance within the Carroll School of Management.<ref name="bc2023" /> The appointment reflected a new phase in Romer's career. According to a 2024 profile by Boston College, Romer has used his position to explore new directions in his research and teaching, continuing to engage with questions about growth, innovation, and institutional design.<ref>{{cite web |title=A Nobel Laureate Remakes Himself at Boston College |url=https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/schools/carroll-school/news/2024/Paul-Romer.html |publisher=Boston College |date=July 26, 2024 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Paul Romer resides in the United States. He maintains a personal website where he publishes commentary on economics and policy.<ref>{{cite web |title=Paul Romer |url=http://paulromer.net/ |publisher=paulromer.net |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His father, Roy Romer, served as Governor of Colorado. Romer is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has been affiliated with the Center for Global Development.
Romer's father, Roy Romer, served as Governor of Colorado from 1987 to 1999. Paul Romer has maintained his personal life largely out of public view, with his public engagements focusing on his academic and policy work. He maintains a personal website where he has shared writings on economics, policy, and related topics.<ref>{{cite web |title=Paul Romer |url=http://paulromer.net/ |publisher=paulromer.net |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Romer's most significant honor is the 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, which he shared with William Nordhaus. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences cited Romer "for integrating technological innovations into long-run macroeconomic analysis."<ref name="cepr" /> The prize recognized the endogenous growth theory that Romer had developed beginning with his 1986 and 1990 papers, which had by that time become a foundational framework in macroeconomics and development economics.
Romer's most significant honor is the 2018 [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences]], which he shared with [[William Nordhaus]] of Yale University. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the prize for their respective contributions to integrating technological innovation and climate change into long-run macroeconomic analysis. Romer was recognized specifically for his work showing "how knowledge can function as a driver of long-term economic growth" and for developing models in which "economic forces govern the willingness of firms to produce new ideas and innovations."<ref name="cepr" /><ref>{{cite news |title=William Nordhaus and Paul Romer Awarded Nobel in Economics for Work on Climate Change and Technology |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/08/business/economic-science-nobel-prize.html |work=The New York Times |date=October 8, 2018 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Prior to the Nobel Prize, Romer received substantial recognition for his contributions. In 1997, ''Time'' magazine named him one of America's 25 most influential people, citing his work on economic growth theory.<ref>{{cite web |title=America's 25 Most Influential People |url=http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,986206-10,00.html |publisher=Time |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> He has been elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has held research positions at the National Bureau of Economic Research and the Center for Global Development.
In 1997, ''Time'' magazine named Romer one of its "25 Most Influential Americans," a recognition that reflected the broad impact his ideas about economic growth had achieved across both academic and policy circles.<ref>{{cite web |title=America's 25 Most Influential People |url=http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,986206-10,00.html |publisher=Time |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Among his doctoral students are the economists Sérgio Rebelo, who became a professor at Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management, and Maurice Kugler, reflecting Romer's influence as a mentor and teacher in addition to his role as a researcher.
Romer has been elected a fellow of the [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]] and the [[Center for Global Development]]. He has also been affiliated as a researcher with the [[National Bureau of Economic Research]]. Boston College described him upon his appointment in 2023 as "one of the most influential economists of this century."<ref name="bc2023" />


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Paul Romer's contributions to economics have reshaped the field's understanding of long-run growth. Prior to his work, the dominant Solow growth model treated technological progress as exogenous—a force that improved productivity over time but whose origins lay outside the economic model. Romer's endogenous growth theory provided a framework in which the production of new ideas was itself an economic activity, driven by incentives, investment, and policy choices. This shift had far-reaching implications for how economists and policymakers think about education, research and development, intellectual property, and international trade.
Paul Romer's contributions to economics have had a lasting effect on both academic research and economic policy. His endogenous growth theory, developed primarily in his 1986 and 1990 papers, fundamentally changed how economists model long-run economic growth. Before Romer's work, the dominant Solow growth model treated technological progress as an unexplained external force. Romer's framework demonstrated that ideas—nonrival goods generated by profit-seeking agents—could be incorporated into formal economic models, providing an endogenous explanation for sustained growth.


The phrase "Growth springs from better recipes, not just from more cooking" became one of the most widely cited summaries of his framework, capturing the essential insight that economic growth depends not simply on accumulating more inputs—labor and capital—but on discovering new and better ways to combine them.<ref name="et_quote" /> Romer's work on the economics of ideas also contributed to broader discussions about the knowledge economy, the role of human capital, and the economics of innovation.
The policy implications of Romer's theory have been substantial. By demonstrating that the production of new ideas responds to economic incentives, his work provided an intellectual foundation for policies aimed at promoting research and development, protecting intellectual property, investing in education, and fostering open exchange of knowledge. His growth models influenced how governments, international organizations, and development practitioners think about the determinants of long-run prosperity.


His concept of charter cities, while not implemented at the scale he originally envisioned, contributed to policy discussions about institutional reform, special economic zones, and the role of governance in development. His critique of "mathiness" sparked an ongoing debate within the economics profession about methodological standards and the relationship between theoretical formalism and empirical substance.
Romer's concept of charter cities, while not implemented as he originally envisioned, contributed to broader discussions about the role of institutions and governance in economic development. The idea that institutional rules could be treated as a form of technology—amenable to adoption, adaptation, and improvement—extended the logic of endogenous growth theory into the domain of political economy and institutional reform.


At the World Bank, despite his brief and contentious tenure, Romer drew attention to questions about the integrity of institutional rankings and the potential for political influence on ostensibly technical assessments—issues that continued to receive scrutiny after his departure.
His doctoral students, including Sérgio Rebelo and Maurice Kugler, have gone on to make their own contributions to the field of economics. The broader research program in endogenous growth theory that Romer helped establish has generated a substantial body of subsequent work by economists around the world.


As Romer's career has continued at Boston College, he has remained engaged with the central questions that have defined his work: how ideas are produced, how they spread, and how institutions and policies can be designed to foster innovation and broadly shared prosperity.<ref name="bc_profile" />
Romer's critique of "mathiness" and his willingness to challenge established practices—whether at the World Bank, in academic journals, or in debates about technology regulation—reflect an intellectual independence that has characterized his career. His advocacy for mass COVID-19 testing and his proposals for taxing large technology firms demonstrate a continued engagement with pressing policy questions, applying economic reasoning to problems that extend well beyond the traditional boundaries of growth theory.


== References ==
== References ==
Line 127: Line 133:
[[Category:World Bank Chief Economists]]
[[Category:World Bank Chief Economists]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:National Bureau of Economic Research]]
[[Category:People from Denver, Colorado]]
[[Category:People from Denver, Colorado]]
[[Category:Macroeconomists]]
[[Category:Growth economists]]
[[Category:Growth economists]]
[[Category:Development economists]]
[[Category:21st-century American economists]]
[[Category:21st-century American economists]]
[[Category:20th-century American economists]]
[[Category:20th-century American economists]]

Latest revision as of 02:31, 25 February 2026


Paul Romer
BornPaul Michael Romer
7 11, 1955
BirthplaceDenver, Colorado, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
OccupationEconomist, academic
TitleSeidner University Professor in Finance
EmployerBoston College
Known forEndogenous growth theory, charter cities concept, "mathiness" critique
EducationUniversity of Chicago (B.S.)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Queen's University
University of Chicago (Ph.D.)
AwardsNobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2018)
Website[paulromer.net Official site]

Paul Michael Romer (born November 7, 1955) is an American economist and policy entrepreneur who holds the position of Seidner University Professor in Finance at Boston College.[1] He is best known for his foundational contributions to endogenous growth theory, which fundamentally reshaped how economists understand the role of ideas, innovation, and technological change in driving long-run economic growth. For this work, Romer was awarded the 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, shared with William Nordhaus, "for integrating technological innovations into long-run macroeconomic analysis."[2] Over a career spanning more than four decades, Romer has held positions at several leading universities, including the University of Chicago, Stanford University, the University of California, Berkeley, the University of Rochester, and New York University. He served as Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of the World Bank from October 2016 until January 2018.[3] Beyond academic economics, Romer has engaged in policy entrepreneurship, most notably through his advocacy of "charter cities" as a mechanism for institutional reform in the developing world, and through his critiques of what he termed "mathiness" in economic research. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he emerged as a prominent voice advocating for large-scale testing as an economic recovery strategy.[4]

Early Life

Paul Michael Romer was born on November 7, 1955, in Denver, Colorado. He grew up in a politically active family; his father, Roy Romer, served as the 39th Governor of Colorado from 1987 to 1999 and later became superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District. This background in public service and policy would later influence Paul Romer's own engagement with policy entrepreneurship beyond the traditional confines of academic economics.

Romer attended Phillips Exeter Academy, one of the oldest and most selective preparatory schools in the United States, located in Exeter, New Hampshire. The rigorous academic environment at Phillips Exeter provided a strong foundation for his subsequent academic pursues.

Education

Romer pursued his undergraduate studies at the University of Chicago, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree. He subsequently undertook graduate studies at multiple institutions. He spent time at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, where he worked with academic advisors Russell Davidson and Ivar Ekeland. He also studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before returning to the University of Chicago for his doctoral work.[2]

At the University of Chicago, Romer completed his Ph.D. in economics in 1983 under the supervision of José Scheinkman and Robert Lucas Jr., the latter himself a Nobel laureate known for his contributions to macroeconomics and rational expectations theory. Romer's doctoral dissertation, titled "Dynamic competitive equilibria with externalities, increasing returns and unbounded growth," laid the groundwork for what would become his most significant intellectual contribution: endogenous growth theory.[5] The dissertation addressed a question that had long puzzled economists—how to formally model the sustained economic growth that characterized modern economies—by incorporating increasing returns and externalities into dynamic equilibrium models. The intellectual environment at the University of Chicago, with its emphasis on rigorous theoretical modeling and market-based approaches to economic analysis, profoundly shaped Romer's analytical framework.

Career

Early Academic Career and the Development of Endogenous Growth Theory

After completing his doctorate, Romer began his academic career at the University of Rochester, where he served as a faculty member. It was during this period and the years immediately following that he developed and published the work that would define his career and ultimately earn him the Nobel Prize.

The central problem Romer addressed was one of the most fundamental in economics: why do some economies grow and others stagnate? The dominant models of economic growth in the mid-twentieth century, particularly the Solow growth model developed by Robert Solow in the 1950s, treated technological progress as an exogenous factor—something that happened outside the model and was not explained by economic forces. While Solow's framework elegantly demonstrated that capital accumulation alone could not sustain long-run growth (due to diminishing returns), it left the most important driver of sustained growth—technological change—unexplained.

Romer's key insight was to develop models in which technological change arose endogenously from the purposeful actions of economic agents. In his seminal 1986 paper, "Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth," published in the Journal of Political Economy, Romer presented a model in which knowledge accumulation by firms generated economy-wide increasing returns.[6] The model showed how the aggregate stock of knowledge, generated as a by-product of individual firms' investment decisions, could drive sustained per capita growth. This paper represented a significant departure from the neoclassical growth framework and helped launch what became known as "new growth theory" or "endogenous growth theory."

Romer further developed these ideas in his 1990 paper, "Endogenous Technological Change," published in the Journal of Political Economy.[7] This paper introduced a more fully specified model in which profit-maximizing firms intentionally invested in research and development to create new ideas. A critical feature of Romer's framework was the treatment of ideas as nonrival goods—once an idea is created, it can be used by many people simultaneously without being depleted, unlike physical goods. However, because ideas are at least partially excludable through mechanisms such as patents, firms can capture enough of the returns from innovation to justify their R&D investments.

This framework had profound implications. As Romer articulated in a phrase that has become widely quoted: "Growth springs from better recipes, not just from more cooking."[8][9] Economic growth, in Romer's view, was not primarily about accumulating more physical inputs—more labor, more capital, more raw materials—but about discovering new and better ways to combine existing resources. The implication was that policies affecting education, research incentives, intellectual property protection, and openness to new ideas could have lasting effects on an economy's growth rate, not merely its level of output.

Romer also made contributions to the analysis of economic growth through other published works, including articles examining the relationship between trade and growth, and the role of human capital.[10][11][12]

Positions at Stanford, Berkeley, Chicago, and NYU

Over the course of his career, Romer held faculty positions at several of the most prominent economics departments and business schools in the United States. After his initial appointment at the University of Rochester, he moved to the University of Chicago, where the intellectual tradition of the Chicago school of economics intersected with his own training. He also held positions at the University of California, Berkeley and at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business, where he was affiliated with the Center for International Development, the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, and the Hoover Institution.

Romer subsequently joined New York University (NYU), where he served as a professor of economics. At NYU, he founded the Marron Institute of Urban Management, reflecting his growing interest in urbanization and governance. He also served as a researcher at the National Bureau of Economic Research and was a fellow at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Center for Global Development.

In 1997, Time magazine recognized Romer as one of America's 25 most influential people, reflecting the impact his ideas about economic growth had achieved beyond the academic community.[13]

Charter Cities

In the late 2000s and early 2010s, Romer became a prominent advocate for the concept of "charter cities"—a proposal to create new cities in developing countries governed under a charter that would import institutional rules and governance frameworks from more developed nations. The idea drew on Romer's growth theory by extending the logic of institutional reform: just as better "recipes" for production drive economic growth, better institutional "rules" could accelerate development.

Romer argued that charter cities would allow developing nations to bypass entrenched institutional problems by creating zones of good governance that could serve as models for broader reform. The concept attracted significant attention and debate. In a 2009 interview with The New York Times Freakonomics blog, Romer discussed the potential for charter cities to transform economic development.[14]

The concept moved from theory toward practice when Honduras, one of the poorest countries in Central America, expressed interest in implementing a version of the charter city idea. The Honduran government passed legislation to create special development regions that would operate under different governance rules. Romer served as an advisor to the project. However, the initiative encountered significant political and legal obstacles. In 2012, Romer withdrew from the Honduras project, citing concerns about transparency and the governance of the process.[15] The Honduran Supreme Court subsequently struck down portions of the original legislation, though modified versions of the special economic zones continued in various forms.

Despite the setbacks in Honduras, the charter cities concept continued to generate discussion among economists and development practitioners. The idea highlighted the importance of institutional frameworks and governance quality in economic development—themes that connected directly to Romer's broader intellectual contributions about the role of ideas and rules in generating economic growth.

Chief Economist of the World Bank

In October 2016, Romer was appointed Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of the World Bank under President Jim Yong Kim, succeeding Kaushik Basu in the role. The appointment of a scholar of Romer's stature signaled the institution's interest in bringing fresh intellectual perspectives to its development mission.

During his tenure at the World Bank, Romer sought to reform certain internal practices. He reportedly warned against the tendency of bank staff to overload reports with pet projects and messages, arguing that this practice had diluted the impact of past publications.[16]

However, Romer's tenure was cut short by a controversy surrounding the World Bank's "Doing Business" report, an influential annual publication that ranked countries on the ease of doing business within their borders. In January 2018, Romer publicly raised concerns that Chile's ranking in the report may have been subject to political manipulation, suggesting that methodological changes had unfairly penalized Chile during the tenure of its left-leaning president, Michelle Bachelet.[17] The Chilean government demanded answers regarding the integrity of the rankings.[18][19]

The controversy escalated rapidly, and Romer resigned from his position on January 24, 2018, after approximately fifteen months in the role.[3] He was succeeded by Shanta Devarajan as acting Chief Economist. Following his departure from the World Bank, Romer returned to his faculty position at NYU. The episode illustrated the tensions that can arise when academic economists accustomed to intellectual independence operate within large bureaucratic institutions, and it underscored the political sensitivity of international development rankings.

"Mathiness" Critique

In 2015, Romer published a paper in the American Economic Review in which he coined the term "mathiness" to describe what he viewed as the misuse of mathematical formalism in economic research. Romer argued that some economists were using sophisticated mathematical models not to clarify economic arguments but to obscure them—dressing up weak or politically motivated claims in the language of rigorous mathematics to give them an undeserved appearance of precision and objectivity.

The "mathiness" critique resonated with ongoing debates within the economics profession about the appropriate role of formal modeling, the replicability of empirical results, and the relationship between theoretical elegance and empirical relevance. Romer's willingness to challenge established practices within his own profession reflected a broader concern about intellectual integrity in academic research.

COVID-19 Pandemic Response

During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Romer became a vocal advocate for large-scale, widespread testing as the primary strategy for reopening the economy while managing the public health crisis. In an interview with The New Yorker in May 2020, Romer argued that frequent, universal testing could allow individuals to safely return to economic activity by identifying and isolating infected persons before they could spread the virus widely.[4] His proposals drew on economic reasoning—the costs of mass testing, he argued, were far lower than the costs of prolonged economic shutdowns. Romer also discussed the potential limitations of digital contact tracing and the resistance Americans might have to surveillance-based approaches to pandemic management.

Policy Advocacy on Big Tech

Romer has also been an active participant in debates about the regulation of large technology companies. In a 2021 discussion hosted by the University of Chicago, Romer argued in favor of a Pigouvian tax on digital advertising revenue that would increase with the size of the firm being levied, as a mechanism to curb market concentration in the technology sector.[20] This proposal reflected Romer's broader view that the accumulation of market power by a small number of firms posed risks to competition and innovation—the very forces that, according to his own growth theory, drive long-run economic progress.

Boston College

In May 2023, Romer joined Boston College as the Seidner University Professor in Finance within the Carroll School of Management.[1] The appointment reflected a new phase in Romer's career. According to a 2024 profile by Boston College, Romer has used his position to explore new directions in his research and teaching, continuing to engage with questions about growth, innovation, and institutional design.[21]

Personal Life

Romer's father, Roy Romer, served as Governor of Colorado from 1987 to 1999. Paul Romer has maintained his personal life largely out of public view, with his public engagements focusing on his academic and policy work. He maintains a personal website where he has shared writings on economics, policy, and related topics.[22]

Recognition

Romer's most significant honor is the 2018 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, which he shared with William Nordhaus of Yale University. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the prize for their respective contributions to integrating technological innovation and climate change into long-run macroeconomic analysis. Romer was recognized specifically for his work showing "how knowledge can function as a driver of long-term economic growth" and for developing models in which "economic forces govern the willingness of firms to produce new ideas and innovations."[2][23]

In 1997, Time magazine named Romer one of its "25 Most Influential Americans," a recognition that reflected the broad impact his ideas about economic growth had achieved across both academic and policy circles.[24]

Romer has been elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Center for Global Development. He has also been affiliated as a researcher with the National Bureau of Economic Research. Boston College described him upon his appointment in 2023 as "one of the most influential economists of this century."[1]

Legacy

Paul Romer's contributions to economics have had a lasting effect on both academic research and economic policy. His endogenous growth theory, developed primarily in his 1986 and 1990 papers, fundamentally changed how economists model long-run economic growth. Before Romer's work, the dominant Solow growth model treated technological progress as an unexplained external force. Romer's framework demonstrated that ideas—nonrival goods generated by profit-seeking agents—could be incorporated into formal economic models, providing an endogenous explanation for sustained growth.

The policy implications of Romer's theory have been substantial. By demonstrating that the production of new ideas responds to economic incentives, his work provided an intellectual foundation for policies aimed at promoting research and development, protecting intellectual property, investing in education, and fostering open exchange of knowledge. His growth models influenced how governments, international organizations, and development practitioners think about the determinants of long-run prosperity.

Romer's concept of charter cities, while not implemented as he originally envisioned, contributed to broader discussions about the role of institutions and governance in economic development. The idea that institutional rules could be treated as a form of technology—amenable to adoption, adaptation, and improvement—extended the logic of endogenous growth theory into the domain of political economy and institutional reform.

His doctoral students, including Sérgio Rebelo and Maurice Kugler, have gone on to make their own contributions to the field of economics. The broader research program in endogenous growth theory that Romer helped establish has generated a substantial body of subsequent work by economists around the world.

Romer's critique of "mathiness" and his willingness to challenge established practices—whether at the World Bank, in academic journals, or in debates about technology regulation—reflect an intellectual independence that has characterized his career. His advocacy for mass COVID-19 testing and his proposals for taxing large technology firms demonstrate a continued engagement with pressing policy questions, applying economic reasoning to problems that extend well beyond the traditional boundaries of growth theory.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Romer to join Boston College as the Seidner University Professor".Boston College.May 3, 2023.https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/bcnews/campus-community/announcements/Nobel-Prize-winning-economist-Paul-Romer-joins-Boston-College.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "New ideas about new ideas: Paul Romer, Nobel laureate".CEPR.October 12, 2018.https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/new-ideas-about-new-ideas-paul-romer-nobel-laureate.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "World Bank economist Paul Romer quits after Chile comments".Reuters.January 24, 2018.https://www.reuters.com/article/us-worldbank-economist-romer/world-bank-economist-paul-romer-quits-after-chile-comments-idUSKBN1FD38Y.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 ChotinerIsaacIsaac"Paul Romer's Case for Nationwide Coronavirus Testing".The New Yorker.May 3, 2020.https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/paul-romer-on-how-to-survive-the-chaos-of-the-coronavirus.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. "Dynamic competitive equilibria with externalities, increasing returns and unbounded growth".ProQuest.https://www.proquest.com/docview/303206758/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. "Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth".JSTOR.https://www.jstor.org/stable/1833190.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. "Endogenous Technological Change".JSTOR.https://www.jstor.org/stable/2937632.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  8. "Economic Growth".The Library of Economics and Liberty.June 29, 2018.https://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/EconomicGrowth.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  9. "Wealth Quote of the Day by Paul M. Romer".The Economic Times.January 2025.https://m.economictimes.com/news/international/us/wealth-quote-of-the-day-by-paul-m-romer-growth-springs-from-better-recipes-not-just-from-more-cooking-what-nobel-laureate-paul-romer-got-right-about-innovation-and-modern-wealth-creation/articleshow/126809102.cms.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  10. JSTOR.https://www.jstor.org/stable/2937946.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  11. JSTOR.https://www.jstor.org/stable/116846.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  12. JSTOR.https://www.jstor.org/stable/2534564.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  13. "America's 25 Most Influential People".Time.http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,986206-10,00.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  14. "Can Charter Cities Change the World? A Q&A with Paul Romer".The New York Times.September 29, 2009.http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/09/29/can-charter-cities-change-the-world-a-qa-with-paul-romer/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  15. "Charter City Plan to Fight Honduras Poverty Loses Initiator".The New York Times.October 1, 2012.https://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/01/world/americas/charter-city-plan-to-fight-honduras-poverty-loses-initiator.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  16. "Why Paul Romer won the Nobel Prize in economics".Marginal Revolution.October 8, 2018.https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2018/10/paul-romer-won-nobel-prize-economics.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  17. "World Bank Unfairly Influenced Its Own Competitiveness Rankings".The Wall Street Journal.January 13, 2018.https://www.wsj.com/articles/world-bank-unfairly-influenced-its-own-competitiveness-rankings-1515797620.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  18. "Chile demands answers in World Bank business ranking controversy".BBC News.https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-42685172.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  19. "Chile Demands Answers in World Bank Business Ranking Controversy".Bloomberg.January 13, 2018.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-13/chile-demands-answers-in-world-bank-business-ranking-controversy.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  20. "Nobel laureate Paul Romer on how to curb Big Tech's power".University of Chicago News.January 25, 2021.https://news.uchicago.edu/story/nobel-laureate-paul-romer-how-curb-big-techs-power.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  21. "A Nobel Laureate Remakes Himself at Boston College".Boston College.July 26, 2024.https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/schools/carroll-school/news/2024/Paul-Romer.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  22. "Paul Romer".paulromer.net.http://paulromer.net/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  23. "William Nordhaus and Paul Romer Awarded Nobel in Economics for Work on Climate Change and Technology".The New York Times.October 8, 2018.https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/08/business/economic-science-nobel-prize.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  24. "America's 25 Most Influential People".Time.http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,986206-10,00.html.Retrieved 2026-02-24.