A professional working inside of one of many fields of economics or having an academic degree in this subject is an economist, and any person within any of these fields can properly claim to be one, although the broad range of matters coming under this designation makes it a practical impossibility for any individual to master all of them (this is the same as for almost all other fields of knowledge such as medicine or engineering). Politicians often consult economists before enacting policy, and many statesmen have academic degrees in economics. Economists are also employed in banking, finance, accountancy, commerce, marketing, and business administration.
Most major universities have an economics faculty, school or department, where academic degrees are awarded in support of potential professional economists. However, many prominent economists come from a background in mathematics, engineering, business, law, sociology, or history. In the United States, about 400 colleges and universities grant about 900 new Ph.D.s in economics each year. The median annunal income for an economist in the United States was US$ 72,780 in May 2004 with the top ten percent earning more than US$ 129,170.US Bureau of Labor, Occupational Outlook Handbook
Economics as a field of knowledge and an independent social science by its own right was born in the 18th century with Adam Smith, and since then it became a discipline with an increasing and definitive importance in modern societies.
The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel is a prize awarded to economists each year for outstanding intellectual contributions in the field of economics. The Prize Winners are announced in October every year. They receive their awards (a prize amount, a gold medal and a diploma) on December 10, the anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death.*
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Economist".
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