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The first public lecture in the series was delivered on 7
December 2001 by Professor John Sutton. The title was A
World Divided - Globalization Games.
John Sutton is Professor of Economics at
the London School of Economics. As well as being a pioneering
researcher in the study of how industries evolve, he is renowned
as a compelling speaker and communicator. This lecture will
be of interest to specialists and non-specialists alike.
Over the past twenty years, the theory of games
has been used by economists to develop new and powerful insights
into a wide range of important issues. We have become aware
of some fascinating similarities between economic developments
and biological processes in nature, as well as some significant
differences. In the first part of this talk, I shall look
at the use of Game Theory in economics. I want to show that
we can think clearly, using logic and evidence, about how
complex human societies evolve.

In the second part, I will apply the theory
to the analysis of globalization. One view is that the normal
workings of the market mechanism drive us towards a 'divided
world', in which the rich get richer while the poor get poorer.
An alternative view is more optimistic, suggesting that the
market makes countries converge to a common condition of prosperity.
If poverty persists, it results from our failure to give free
rein to the workings of the market. The truth, I shall argue,
lies in between these two views: the policies of governments
will profoundly influence the degree to which lower income
countries succeed in joining the high income club. The future
is for us to determine.
Among the themes developed in the lecture:
- The founding fathers of game theory include two of the
most fascinating figures in the mathematics and economics
of the twentieth century: John von Neuman, a leading figure
both in the development of the atom bomb and in the early
history of computers; and John Nash, one of the most brilliant
mathematicians of his generation whose life was clouded
by decades of mental illness, but who gradually recovered
- he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 1996.
- Game theory has made waves in the press over the past
few years as it provided the basis for sophisticated designs
of auction processes in the renowned 'spectrum auctions'
which netted hundreds of millions of pounds in revenues
to governments round the world. It is less well known that
it has also provided fascinating insights into the workings
of auctions for oil exploration, an area that provides us
with some of the most striking evidence in favour of game-theory
based models.
- One of the most striking phenomena documented by biologists
who have used game theoretic methods is the "Red Queen Effect",
whereby an escalation process occurs as competing species
vie with each other for some relative advantage. As the
Red Queen remarked to Alice: in this country you have to
run that fast just to stay in the same place. A close analogy
exists between this process, and the competitive escalation
that occurs as firms competing in the same global market
vie with each other in enhancing their technological capabilities…
- In the early nineteenth century, income disparities between
richer and poorer countries were much less than they are
today. Why? At one level, the answer is obvious: the Industrial
Revolution saw a leaping ahead of the industrialised world,
while the rest of the world lagged behind. But why did industrialisation
not spread more widely? And why, if we look at world income
distribution over the past 50 years - a period of increasing
globalisation and integration of the world economy - do
we see no narrowing of income disparities, but an increasing
divergence? The shape of the distribution of per capita
GDP now (for the first time ever) shows a 'twin peaks' profile,
with a set of 'rich countries' becoming sharply separated
from a group of 'poor countries': does the working of free
markets drive this process?
The text of this lecture is not available, but it is closely
based on a lecture given at the British Academy last year,
entitled "Rich
Trades, Scare Capabilities: Industrial Development Revisited,"
(Keynes Lecture, 2000, forthcoming in the Proceedings of the
British Academy, 2001). This lecture is attached, and can
be downloaded from this site. To follow up the broader issues
relating to Game Theory discussed in the early part of my
lecture, I recommend the excellent biography of John Nash
by Silvia Nasar, entitled A Beautiful Mind, Faber and
Faber, 1998, and for applications in biology, Matt Ridley's
wonderful book entitled The Red Queen, Viking, 1993.
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