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  1. James Alexander Mirrlees (Minnigaff, Escocia; 5 de julio de 1936-Cambridge, Inglaterra; 29 de agosto de 2018) fue un economista escocés. Profesor de Cambridge, que fue laureado con el Premio del Banco de Suecia en Ciencias Económicas en memoria de Alfred Nobel en 1996 junto con William Vickrey «por sus contribuciones fundamentales a la ...

  2. Sir James Alexander Mirrlees FRSE FBA (5 July 1936 – 29 August 2018) was a British economist and winner of the 1996 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. He was knighted in the 1997 Birthday Honours.

  3. James A. Mirrlees (Minnigaff, 1936) Economista británico. Estudió en el Douglas Ewart High School y en la Newton Stewart e ingresó en la Universidad de Edimburgo, en 1954, para seguir estudios de Matemáticas, de los que se graduó en 1957. De Escocia se marchó a Inglaterra tras su admisión en el Trinity College de la Universidad de Cambridge.

  4. 29 de ago. de 2018 · James Mirrlees, 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. Learn more about Mirrleess life and work.

  5. James Mirrlees, who has died aged 82, was the most distinguished living British economist and one of the most influential in the world. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 1996, an...

  6. Sir James Mirrlees's work in microeconomics is world-renowned. During the 1960s and 1970s he worked on the theory of public economic policy which would eventually earn him the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1996 for his pathbreaking work on the economic theory of incentives under asymmetric information.

  7. 4 de sept. de 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 economic challenges —...