Nakahara Prize

The Nakahara Prize is an annual award given by the Japanese Economic Association to Japanese economists under the age of 45 whose work has gained international recognition. The prize was created in 1995, and named after its sponsor Nobuyuki Nakahara. The aim of the prize is honoring and encouraging young (under 45 years) economists to publish internationally well-recognized papers and books. In 2016, Sagiri Kitao became the first woman awarded the prize.

Recipients

Year Recipients University
1995Fumio HayashiUniversity of Tokyo
1996Kiminori MatsuyamaNorthwestern University
1997Nobuhiro KiyotakiLondon School of Economics
1998Kiyohiko NishimuraUniversity of Tokyo
1999Akira OkadaKyoto University
2000Kazuya KamiyaUniversity of Tokyo
2001Charles HoriokaOsaka University
2002Michihiro KandoriUniversity of Tokyo
2003Hideshi ItohHitotsubashi University
2004Hitoshi MatsushimaUniversity of Tokyo
2005Takeo HoshiUniversity of California, San Diego
2006Yuichi KitamuraYale University
2007Akihiko MatsuiUniversity of Tokyo
2008Atsushi KajiiKyoto University
2009Hideo KonishiBoston College
2010Takashi KamihigashiKobe University
2011Atsushi InoueNorth Carolina State University
2012Mototsugu ShintaniVanderbilt University
2013Katsumi ShimotsuUniversity of Tokyo
2014Kosuke AokiUniversity of Tokyo
2015Keisuke HiranoUniversity of Arizona
2016Sagiri KitaoKeio University
2017Hiroyuki KasaharaUniversity of British Columbia
2018Toshihiko MukoyamaUniversity of Virginia
2019Takashi HayashiUniversity of Glasgow
2020Ryo OkuiSeoul National University
gollark: ... IRC has that too?
gollark: At least IRC is actually an open protocol with multiple implementations and servers. Discord... isn't.
gollark: Automatically.
gollark: Even if Discord somehow managed to block selfbots, which I don't think they can do in practice, it would be possible to do something ridiculous like... run Discord in one of those headless browser things, and read out messages and whatnot.
gollark: I think trying to restrict this information from spreading around is... about as effective as DRM, really, for the reason that you can kind of control who gets information but not how it's used or spread out after they do.

See also

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