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Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion, Peter Howitt win 2025 Nobel Economics Prize

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The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2025 to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion, and Peter Howitt “for having explained innovation-driven economic growth.”

According to the announcement on Monday, one half of the prize goes to Joel Mokyr, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA, “for having identified the prerequisites for sustained growth through technological progress.”

The other half is shared jointly by Philippe Aghion, Collège de France and INSEAD, Paris, France, The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK, and Peter Howitt, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA, “for the theory of sustained growth through creative destruction.”

Innovation as the Engine of Progress

The Royal Swedish Academy stated that the laureates “show how new technology can drive sustained growth.

Over the last two centuries, for the first time in history, the world has seen sustained economic growth. This has lifted vast numbers of people out of poverty and laid the foundation of our prosperity.”

“This year’s laureates in economic sciences, Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt, explain how innovation provides the impetus for further progress.”

The Academy noted that “technology advances rapidly and affects us all, with new products and production methods replacing old ones in a never-ending cycle.

“This is the basis for sustained economic growth, which results in a better standard of living, health and quality of life for people around the globe.”

But as the release observed, “this was not always the case. Quite the opposite – stagnation was the norm throughout most of human history.

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“Despite important discoveries now and again, which sometimes led to improved living conditions and higher incomes, growth always eventually levelled off.”

From Stagnation to Sustained Growth

Joel Mokyr used historical sources to uncover how sustained economic growth became the new normal.

He showed that for innovations to succeed one another continuously, “we not only need to know that something works, but we also need to have scientific explanations for why.”

The Academy explained that “the latter was often lacking prior to the industrial revolution, which made it difficult to build upon new discoveries and inventions.”

Mokyr also emphasized “the importance of society being open to new ideas and allowing change.”

 

 

His work helps explain how the Industrial Revolution marked a fundamental shift — when the combination of science, technology, and cultural openness created the conditions for self-sustaining progress.

Creative Destruction: The Double-Edged Force of Growth

Meanwhile, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt have, since their landmark 1992 paper, explored the mechanics of modern growth.

Their mathematical model captured the concept of creative destruction — the dynamic by which innovation simultaneously builds and disrupts.

As the Academy described, “when a new and better product enters the market, the companies selling the older products lose out.

“The innovation represents something new and is thus creative. However, it is also destructive, as the company whose technology becomes passé is outcompeted.”

Their research, it added, shows that “creative destruction creates conflicts that must be managed in a constructive manner.

“Otherwise, innovation will be blocked by established companies and interest groups that risk being put at a disadvantage.”

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Chair of the Committee for the Prize in Economic Sciences, John Hassler, remarked, “The laureates’ work shows that economic growth cannot be taken for granted. We must uphold the mechanisms that underly creative destruction, so that we do not fall back into stagnation.”

Meet the Trio: Architects of the Modern Growth Story

Joel Mokyr, born in 1946 in Leiden, the Netherlands, earned his PhD in 1974 from Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.

He is Professor at Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA.

Mokyr is a leading historian of technological change and author of The Lever of Riches and A Culture of Growth, which trace how ideas and institutions shaped the Industrial Revolution.

Philippe Aghion, born in 1956 in Paris, France, received his PhD in 1987 from Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.

He is Professor at the Collège de France and INSEAD in Paris, and at The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK.

Aghion is one of the foremost theorists of innovation-led growth and co-author of The Power of Creative Destruction.

Peter Howitt, born in 1946 in Canada, obtained his PhD in 1973 from Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA, and is Professor at Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.

His collaboration with Aghion produced one of the most influential frameworks in modern economics, illuminating how progress and disruption go hand in hand.

As the Academy concluded, “The laureates showed how new technology can drive sustained growth.”

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Education

Law student Ayomiposi Ojajuni kills self over failure to write final exam

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A student in the Yola Campus of the Nigeria Law School, identified as Ayomiposi Ojajuni, has allegedly taken his own life over failure to sit for his final examination.

The news broke Sunday that he killed himself on Saturday, December 6, because he was barred from doing the bar final examination at the Yola Campus.

People close to the deceased allege that he became distressed in the morning of Saturday on finding that he was indeed not going to be allowed to take the professional examination that commenced that morning.

He reportedly swallowed a deadly substance on receiving the news and died Sunday morning even after he was rushed to nearby Modibbo Adama University Teaching Hospital, Yola.

Sources have explained that the authorities came to the decision to stop him from taking his examination because he did not respond to multiple queries previously issued to him by the school authorities.

The Police Public Relations Officer in Adamawa State, SP Sulaiman Nguroje could not be reached for comment Sunday afternoon when this report was being concluded, but a different police source confirmed Ayomiposi Ojajuni’s suicide story.

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How A Classmate’s Question At Harvard Forced Me To Dump Banking For Politics – Abia Governor, Alex Otti

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He stated that this question, which Raina asked him at Harvard Business School in 2009, redirected his life from banking to politics.

Alex Otti, the Governor of Abia State, has recounted a story about a question a Harvard classmate asked him that ended up haunting him for a long time.

The governor stated that his classmate, Samvit Raina, an American of Indian descent, had asked him why many Nigerians he had met were successful, brilliant, and hardworking, yet the country from which they came was economically and development-wise backwards.

He stated that this question, which Raina asked him at Harvard Business School in 2009, redirected his life from banking to politics.

Speaking at the 2025 dinner and award presentation ceremony of the Harvard Business School Association of Nigeria in Onikan, Lagos, on Saturday, he said that his classmate’s question led him to abandon a lucrative banking career to pursue public service.

Otti, at the time, was participating in the Advanced Management Programme at Harvard.

He said, “I did not respond promptly in order not to be seen as endorsing an uncomplimentary remark against my country by a foreigner, but within me, I knew that he may not be the only one asking the question.”

The question, Otti explained, prompted him to engage in deep reflection during his time in Boston, where the school is situated.

“I spent the rest of my time at Boston reflecting on the poser raised by my course mate: how do you explain the paradox of very successful people operating from a country that is everything but successful?” he said.

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The introspection, Otti said, led him to confront uncomfortable truths about Nigeria’s development challenges.

Otti said he thought about his home state of Abia and its development challenges at the time.

“The more deeply I thought, the more worried I became. Nigeria is a nation of multiple constituencies and wherever you go, there are no shortage of intelligent, hardworking and passionate individuals. The question then is: why are we failing at even the most basic matters of civilisation? Why are elementary concerns like waste disposal, access to potable water, electricity, roads, primary healthcare and basic education still a challenge here?” he asked.

After examining the foundational structures that propelled other nations to greatness, Otti said he arrived at a disturbing conclusion.

“I realised that our problem was never about the size of the treasury box nor the appetite for progress but in the fact that those who ought to have taken the lead were often absent in the decision-making room. Like myself, they were busy chasing after career success, looking to hit the next million dollar or to publish their paper in a reputable journal. To these incredibly-smart people, government is treated as a minor irritation.

“Ultimately, while we were at Harvard, Cambridge, MIT, Oxford and in other elite universities topping the result charts and winning all the laurels, barely-educated individuals were taking decisions that influence how the world sees Nigeria in our various local government headquarters, state capitals and in Abuja,” he noted.

Otti challenged the gathering to find out where the majority of result-driven leaders are most likely to be found to understand where the country’s challenges were coming from.

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“Where are you most likely to find a superior number of ethical and result-driven leaders: at the board meeting of an NSE-listed company or at a gathering of political stakeholders in our states? You can probe further to ask: where would a First-Class graduate from an elite university be keener to start his professional life: at a regular government agency in Umuahia or in a blue-chip company?” he asked.

According to the governor, the disinterest in public affairs by the country’s best minds has had negative consequences on its economy and development.

“The summary of it is that our disinterest in public affairs offered an extended invitation to persons of questionable development orientation to step in and produce outcomes that are generally unsatisfactory,” he said.

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Firm offers two-year scholarship to rescued schoolchildren

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EduReach, an online educational platform, has announced a two-year full scholarship for all rescued students from Kebbi and Niger States, in what it described as a deliberate effort to help abducted children overcome trauma and continue their education even outside the classroom.

Mamu Muhammad, CEO of STEM Child Care Academy and founder of STEM-EduReach, told journalists in Abuja that the initiative is designed not only to restore learning opportunities but also to support the psychological recovery of children who survived abductions.

“Rescued children face another challenge: post-traumatic stress disorder, which can hinder their return to learning,” Muhammad said.

“We have formally written to the respective state governments to extend this offer as part of our commitment to supporting the recovery and reintegration of these students into learning.”

He added that the programme provides access to Nigerian and Cambridge curricula, STEM subjects such as robotics, coding, and artificial intelligence, as well as pre-recorded lessons delivered by experienced educators.

Students will also benefit from lesson notes, quizzes, assignments, live discussion forums, and personalised learning paths tailored to their progress.

Muhammad warned that the recent abductions in Kebbi and Niger, which forced the closure of schools, risk swelling the ranks of out-of-school children.

“The abduction of schoolchildren risks swelling the ranks of out-of-school children, as these acts of terror are intended to instil fear and discourage parents from sending their children to school,” he said.

He added that flexible enrolment and self-paced learning would allow rescued students to continue schooling at home, reducing the pressure of returning immediately to physical classrooms while coping with trauma.

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“No child should be denied the right to safe, equitable, and quality education,” Muhammad emphasised, urging stakeholders to collaborate in ensuring rescued children not only return to school but thrive in supportive environments.

Twenty-four schoolgirls kidnapped from the Government Girls Comprehensive Senior Secondary School in Kebbi were freed after a coordinated, non-kinetic rescue led by the Federal Government and involving the Office of the National Security Adviser and the Department of State Services. In a separate incident, 38 students and worshippers abducted from a church in Kwara State, as well as pupils taken from St Mary’s Catholic School in Niger State, were also released, with authorities attributing the outcomes to dialogue and negotiation rather than force.

Both sets of rescued students are now receiving medical checks and reintegration support as investigations continue into the kidnappings.

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