Deaton, who was born in Edinburgh in 1945, now works at Princeton University in the United States.
The academy said the work for which Deaton is now being honoured revolves around three central questions: How do consumers distribute their spending among different goods; how much of society's income is spent and how much is saved; and how do we best measure and analyze welfare and poverty?
Last year, French economist Jean Tirole won the 8 million Swedish kronor (about USD 975,000) award for his research on market power and regulation.
Sweden's central bank added the economics prize in 1968 as a memorial to Nobel.
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The announcement concludes this year's presentations of Nobel winners.
The medicine prize went to three scientists from Japan, the US and China who discovered drugs to fight malaria and other tropical diseases.
Japanese and Canadian scientists won the physics prize for discovering that tiny particles called neutrinos have mass and scientists from Sweden, the U.S. And Turkey won the chemistry prize for their research into the way cells repair damaged DNA.
The awards will be handed out on December 10, the anniversary of prize founder Alfred Nobel's death in 1896, at lavish ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo.