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George Akerlof

American economist (b. 1940), Nobel laureate (2001), whose 1970 paper <em>The Market for 'Lemons'</em> founded the economics of information asymmetry and supplied the analytical template for understanding what happens when AI polish makes professional judgment invisible.
George Akerlof's 1970 Quarterly Journal of Economics paper The Market for 'Lemons': Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism demonstrated that asymmetric information — one party knowing more about quality than the other — could destroy markets even in the absence of fraud or coercion. The paper was rejected by three journals before publication, on the grounds that it was either trivially correct or trivially wrong. It became one of the most-cited papers in economics and earned Akerlof the 2001 Nobel Prize (shared with Michael Spence and Joseph Stiglitz). The lemons framework now provides the structural template for understanding what AI's uniform surface quality does to markets for professional expertise.

In The You On AI Field Guide

Akerlof's career has bridged rigorous economic theory and engagement with social and behavioral questions that mainstream economics traditionally neglected. His partnership with Rachel Kranton on identity economics, his work with Robert Shiller on phishing and animal spirits, and his Presidential Address to the American Economic

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