Robert J. Shiller is
the Stanley B. Resor Professor of Economics, Department of
Economics and Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale
University, and fellow at the International Center for Finance,
Yale School of Management. He received his B. A. from the
University of Michigan in 1967 and his Ph.D. in economics from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1972. He has written on
financial markets, financial innovation, behavioral economics,
macroeconomics, real estate, statistical methods, and on public
attitudes, opinions, and moral judgments regarding markets.
His 1989 book Market
Volatility (MIT Press) is a mathematical and behavioral analysis of
price fluctuations in speculative markets. His 1993 book Macro
Markets: Creating Institutions for Managing Society's Largest
Economic Risks (Oxford University Press) proposes a variety of new
risk-management contracts, such as futures contracts in national
incomes or in real estate that would permit the management of risks
to standards of living. His book Irrational Exuberance (Princeton
2000, Broadway Books 2001, 2nd edition Princeton 2005, and in 15
foreign language editions) is an analysis and explication of
speculative bubbles, with special reference to the stock market and
real estate. His book The New Financial Order: Risk in the 21st
Century (Princeton University Press, 2003, 2004, and in 8 foreign
language editions) is an analysis of an expanding role of finance,
insurance, and public finance in our future.
He has been research
associate, National Bureau of Economic Research since 1980, and has
been co-organizer of NBER workshops: on behavioral finance with
Richard Thaler since 1991, and on macroeconomics and individual
decision making with George Akerlof since 1994. He serves as Vice
President of the American Economic Association, 2005 and President
of the Eastern Economic Association, 2005. He writes a column
"Finance in the 21st Century" for Project Syndicate, which
publishes around the world.
Robert Shiller is a
well-known economist and Stanley B. Resor Professor of Economics at
Yale University and holds a joint appointment with the Yale School
of Management. He is best known for his book Irrational Exuberance,
a New York Times best-seller, which predicted the burst of the
stock market bubble in the late 1990s, and warns about the
emergence of a housing bubble after the dot-com bubble burst in
2000. A pioneer in the study of behavioral finance, he has
organized a series of seminars in this field along with Richard
Thaler, a professor at the University of Chicago. He is also the
author of Macro Markets, which won the first annual Paul A.
Samuelson Award of TIAA-CREF.
Born in 1946, Shiller
obtained his B.A. from the University of Michigan in 1967, and his
Ph.D. from MIT in 1972. He has taught at Yale since 1982 and
previously held faculty positions at the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania and the University of Minnesota.
Long before he became
famous for his book Irrational Exuberance, Shiller developed his
thinking on this subject in a series of studies published in
academic journals, most notably with an article entitled Do stock
prices move too much to be justified by subsequent changes in
dividends?, published in the American Economic Review in 1981. At
the time, the dominant view in the economics profession was that
financial market values were based on the rational expectations of
investors. It was argued that, if prices are volatile, it is
because of random new pieces of information which market
participants have received.
In his 1981 study,
Shiller started with the proposition that a rational stock market
should base stock prices on the expected receipt of future
dividends, discounted to a present value. Looking at the
performance of the US stock market since the 1920s, he considered
the kinds of expectations of future dividends and discount rates
that could justify the wide range of variation experienced in the
stock market. He concluded that the volatility of the stock market
was greater than could plausibly be explained by any rational view
of the future.
Shiller gained
increased credence for his views following the 1987 stock market
crash. He also conducted survey research, asking investors and
stock traders what motivated them to make trades, which further
bolstered his hypothesis that these decisions are often driven by
emotion rather than rational calculation. This is a finding which
is, perhaps, not particularly surprising to the layperson, but
which nevertheless had to contend against the strong commitment to
"rational man" among economics and finance academics. Shiller's
admirers, among others, consider the increasing respect that he has
gained to be an impressive victory for common sense against the
forces of entrenched theoretical dogma.