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New York – An American economist who developed theories about unemployment that better capture how workers and companies make decisions about jobs has been named winner of the 2006 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.

Edmund S. Phelps, 73, a professor at Columbia University in New York, was cited Monday for research into the relationship between inflation and unemployment, giving governments better tools to formulate economic policy.

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which announced Phelps’ selection in Stockholm, said in its citation that “Phelps’ work has fundamentally altered our views on how the macroeconomy operates.”

Americans have swept all the Nobels announced so far this year, with Phelps being the sixth named for one of the prestigious awards. The economics prize carries an award of $1.4 million.

Two other Nobel Prizes have yet to be announced – the winner of the prize for literature will be announced Thursday, followed by the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday.

Phelps told reporters in his New York apartment that he learned of the prize in a phone call from Sweden that woke him early in the morning.

He said he had waited for the award for a long time but wasn’t expecting it this year.

“I thought for a time I would get it in my 60s, then I thought I would get it in my 70s, and more recently, I’ve been thinking that I would get it in my 80s,” he said.

He planned to teach his Monday class at Columbia – and share some champagne with his colleagues.

Phelps was born in Chicago and earned his bachelor’s degree at Amherst College in Amherst, Mass., in 1955 and his Ph.D. at Yale University in 1959. He has been the McVickar professor of political economy at Columbia since 1982.

The Swedish academy cited research by Phelps that challenged the prevailing view in the 1960s that there was a predictable tradeoff between inflation and unemployment. That view held that any government wanting to reduce joblessness by stimulating the economy would have to tolerate rising prices as a result.

Phelps argued that this view didn’t take workers’ or companies’ decision-making into account, and his research showed that their expectations about unemployment and inflation affected their actions.

Phelps told reporters Monday that his goal was to make economic theory better reflect the real world.

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