Memberships and honorary degrees Hurwicz was elected a fellow of the
Econometric Society in 1947 and in 1969 was the society's president. Hurwicz was elected a Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1965. In 1974 he was inducted into the
National Academy of Sciences and in 1977 was named a Distinguished Fellow of the
American Economic Association.
Named for Hurwicz First presented in 1950, the
Hurwicz criterion is thought about to this day in the area of decision making called "under uncertainty."
Abraham Wald published
decision functions that year. Hurwicz combined Wald's ideas with work done in 1812 by
Pierre-Simon Laplace. Hurwicz's criterion gives each decision a value which is "a weighted sum of its worst and best possible outcomes" represented as
α and known as an index of pessimism or optimism.
R. Duncan Luce and
Howard Raiffa, in a field some date back to
Jacob Bernoulli. In 2010, the College of Liberal Arts at the
University of Minnesota launched the
Heller-Hurwicz Economics Institute, a global initiative created to inform public policy by supporting and promoting frontier economic research and by communicating findings to leading academics, policymakers, and business executives around the world. Funds raised by the Institute are used to attract and retain preeminent faculty and, in part, to support graduate student research. The
University of Michigan has an endowed chair named for Hurwicz, the Leonid Hurwicz Collegiate Professor of Complex Systems, Political Science, and Economics, currently held by
Scott E. Page. The
Leonid Hurwicz Distinguished Lecture is given to the Minnesota Economic Association (as is the Heller lecture).
John Ledyard (2007),
Robert Lucas,
Roger Myerson,
Edward C. Prescott,
James Quirk,
Nancy Stokey and
Neil Wallace are among those who have delivered the lecture since it was inaugurated in 1992.
Nobel Prize in Economics In October 2007, Hurwicz shared the
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences with
Eric Maskin of the
Institute for Advanced Study and
Roger Myerson of the
University of Chicago "for having laid the foundations of
mechanism design theory." During a telephone interview, a representative of the Nobel Foundation told Hurwicz and his wife that Hurwicz was the oldest person to win the Nobel Prize. Hurwicz said, "I hope that others who deserve it also got it." When asked which of all the applications of mechanism design he was most pleased to see he said
welfare economics. The winners applied game theory, a field advanced by mathematician
John Forbes Nash, to discover the best and most efficient means to reach a desired outcome, taking into account individuals' knowledge and self-interest, which may be hidden or private. Mechanism design has been used to model negotiations and taxation, voting and elections, Unable to attend the Nobel Prize ceremony in Stockholm because of his poor health, Hurwicz received the prize in Minneapolis. Accompanied by Evelyn, his spouse of six decades, and his family, he was the guest of honor at a convocation held on the campus of the University of Minnesota presided over by university president
Robert Bruininks. Immediately following a live broadcast of the Nobel Prize awards ceremony,
Jonas Hafström, Swedish ambassador to the United States, personally awarded the Economics Prize to Professor Hurwicz. His wife died in 2016 aged 93. ==Publications==