By Canadian Press on October 13, 2025.
Canadian economist Peter Howitt is among the group of three researchers who won this year’s Nobel memorial prize in economics. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced Monday, that Howitt, along with Dutch-born Joel Mokyr and French Philippe Aghion, received the prize for “having explained innovation-driven economic growth.” Howitt and Aghion relied on mathematics to explain how creative destruction works, a key concept in economics that refers to the process in which beneficial new innovations replace — and thus destroy — older technologies and businesses. Both economists studied the mechanisms behind sustained growth, including in a 1992 article in which they constructed a mathematical model for creative destruction. Howitt, 79, received his bachelor’s degree in economics from Montreal’s McGill University and his master’s degree from the University of Western in London, Ontario. He is a professor of social sciences at Brown University in Rhode Island. Howitt shared one half of the prize, nearly 1.6 million Canadian dollars, with Aghion, while the rest went to Mokyr. With files from The Associated Press This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 13, 2025. The Canadian Press 11