Robert J. Shiller is Sterling Professor of Economics, Department of Economics and Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics,
Yale University, and Professor of Finance 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) (available
via subscribing libraries on Oxford Online) proposes a variety of new
risk-management contracts, such as futures contracts in national incomes or
securities based on 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, 3rd
edition Princeton 2015) 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) is
an analysis of an expanding role of finance, insurance, and public finance in
our future. His book Subprime Solution: How the
Global Financial Crisis Happened and What to Do about It,
published in September 2008 by Princeton University Press, offers an analysis
of the housing and economic crisis and a plan of action against it. He
co-authored, with George A. Akerlof, Animal Spirits: How Human
Psychology Drives the Economy and Why It Matters for Global Capitalism
published in March 2009 by Princeton University Press. His book, Finance and the Good Society,
was published in April 2012 by Princeton University Press. He co-authored, with
George Akerlof, Phishing for Phools: The Economics of Manipulation and Deception
in September 2015 by Princeton University Press.
He was co-founder of Case Shiller Weis, Inc. in 1991, whose repeat-sales home
price indices, developed originally with Karl E. Case, are now produced by CoreLogic and published as the S&P/Case-Shiller Home
Price Indices. The Chicago Mercantile Exchange now maintains futures markets based on the
S&P/Case-Shiller Indices. He was cofounder of MacroMarkets,
LLC in 1999, which launched �Macroshares� based on
oil at the American Stock Exchange 2006-9, and on the S&P/Case-Shiller Home
Price Indices at the New York Stock Exchange 2009-2010.
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 1991-2015, and on macroeconomics and
individual decision making (behavioral macroeconomics) with George Akerlof 1994-2007.
He was awarded the Nobel
Prize in Economic Sciences jointly with Eugene Fama
and Lars Peter Hansen in 2013.
He served as Vice President of the American
Economic Association, 2005 and President of the Eastern Economic Association, 2006-07. He
was elected President of the American
Economic Association for 2016.
He writes a regular column "Finance in
the 21st Century" for Project Syndicate, which publishes around the world, and "Economic
View" for The New York Times.