Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T05:47:56.306Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

AN INTERVIEW WITH ROBERT J. SHILLER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 2004

John Y. Campbell
Affiliation:
Harvard University

Abstract

A recent article in The Economist magazine divided economists into “poets” and “plumbers,” the former articulating radical new visions of the field and the latter patiently installing the infrastructure needed to implement those visions. Bob Shiller is the rare economist who is both poet and plumber. Not only that, he is also entrepreneur and pundit. His work has fundamentally changed the theory, econometrics, practice, and popular understanding of finance.

Starting in the late 1970's, Bob boldly challenged the prevailing orthodoxy of financial economics. He showed that financial asset prices often deviate substantially from the levels predicted by simple efficient-markets models, and he developed new empirical methods to measure these price deviations. In the early 1980's, Bob went on to argue that economists need a much more detailed understanding of investor psychology if they are to understand asset price movements. He pioneered the emerging field of behavioral economics and its most successful branch, behavioral finance. At the end of the century, Bob articulated his vision of finance in a wildly successful popular book, Irrational Exuberance. He became so well known that TIAA-CREF asked him to appear in a series of full-page advertisements in the popular press.

Although Bob does not believe that investors use financial markets in a perfectly rational manner, he does believe that these markets offer great possibilities to improve the human condition. His recent work asks how existing financial markets can be used, and new financial markets can be designed, to improve the sharing of risks across groups of people in different regions, countries, and occupations. He has explored risk-sharing possibilities not only in journal articles, but also in business ventures and a 2003 book, The New Financial Order: Risk in the 21st Century.

It was a great privilege for me to interview Bob Shiller. Bob's arrival at Yale when I was a Ph.D. student there set the course of my career as an economist. Bob reinvigorated the Yale tradition of macroeconomics, with its emphasis on the central role of financial markets in the macroeconomy and its idealism about the possibility of improving macroeconomic outcomes. First as a thesis adviser, then as a coauthor, mentor, and friend, Bob showed me how to contribute to this tradition.

The interview took place at the 2003 annual meetings of the Allied Social Science Associations in Washington, D.C. We met in a hotel suite, ate a room service meal, and had the enjoyable conversation that is reproduced below.

Type
MD INTERVIEW
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson L.C. & J.L. Jordan 1968 Monetary and fiscal actions: A test of their relative importance. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review 50, 1123.Google Scholar
Athanasoulis S. & R.J. Shiller 2001 World income components: Measuring and exploiting risk sharing opportunities. American Economic Review 91, 10311054.Google Scholar
Baily M.J., R.F. Muth, & H.O. Nourse 1963 A regression method for real estate price index construction. Journal of the American Statistical Association 933942.Google Scholar
Belsley D.E. Kuh & R. Welsch 1980 Regression Diagnostics: Identifying Influential Data and Sources of Collinearity. New York: Wiley.
Brainard W. & F.T. Dolbear 1971 Social risk and financial markets. American Economic Review 61, 360370.Google Scholar
Campbell J.Y. & R.J. Shiller 1988 The dividend-price ratio and expectations of future dividends and discount factors. Review of Financial Studies 1, 195228.Google Scholar
Campbell J.Y. & R.J. Shiller 1998 Valuation ratios and the long-run stock market outlook. Journal of Portfolio Management 24 (2), 1126.Google Scholar
Case K.E. 1986 The market for single-family homes in Boston. New England Economic Review (May/June) 3848.Google Scholar
Case K.E. & R.J. Shiller 1988 The behavior of home buyers in boom and post-boom markets. New England Economic Review (Nov./Dec.) 2946.Google Scholar
Case K.E. & R.J. Shiller 1989 The efficiency of the market for single family homes. American Economic Review 71, 325331.Google Scholar
Colander D. 1999 Conversations with James Tobin and Robert Shiller on the “Yale Tradition” in macroeconomics. Macroeconomic Dynamics 3, 116143.Google Scholar
Dickey D.A. 1975 Hypothesis Testing for Nonstationary Time Series. Manuscript, Iowa State University.
Fair R.C. & R.J. Shiller 1990 Comparing information in forecasts from econometric models. American Economic Review 80, 375389.Google Scholar
Fama E. 1970 Efficient capital markets: A review of empirical work. Journal of Finance 25, 383417.Google Scholar
Fisher F. 1966 The Identification Problem in Econometrics. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Fisher I. 1913 A compensated dollar. Quarterly Journal of Economics 27, 213235.Google Scholar
Fisher I. 1928 The Money Illusion. New York: Adelphi.
Friedman B.M. 1977 Even the St. Louis model now believes fiscal policy. Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking 9, 365367.Google Scholar
Friedman M. 1953 Essays in Positive Economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Fuller Wayne A. 1976 Introduction to Statistical Time Series. New York, NY: Wiley.
Grossman S. & R.J. Shiller 1981 The determinants of the variability of stock market prices. American Economic Review 71, 222227.Google Scholar
Hansen L.P. & R. Jagannathan 1991 Restrictions on intertemporal marginal rates of substitution implied by asset returns. Journal of Political Economy 99, 225262.Google Scholar
Kahneman D. & A. Tversky 1979 Prospect theory: An analysis of decision under risk. Econometrica 17, 263291.Google Scholar
Learner E. 1978 Specification Searches: Ad Hoc Inferences with Nonexperimental Data. Wiley.
Lucas R.E. 1975 Econometric policy evaluation: A critique. In K. Brunner & A. Meltzer (eds.), The Phillips Curve and Labor Markets. The Journal of Monetary Economics Supplement, pp. 1946. New York: Elsevier.
Modigliani F. & R.J. Shiller 1973 Inflation, rational expectations and the term structure of interest rates. Economica 40 (157), 1243.Google Scholar
Newcomb S. 1879 The standard of value. North American Review 58, 223237.Google Scholar
Perron P. & P. Phillips 1988 Testing for a unit root in time series autoregression. Biometrika 75, 335346.Google Scholar
Shiller R.J. 1972 Rational Expectations and the Term Structure of Interest Rates. Ph.D. Dissertation, MIT.
Shiller R.J. 1973 A distributed lag estimator derived from smoothness priors. Econometrica 41, 775788.Google Scholar
Shiller R.J. 1979 The volatility of long term interest rates and expectations models of the term structure. Journal of Political Economy 87, 11901219.Google Scholar
Shiller R.J. 1982 Consumption, asset markets and macroeconomic fluctuations. Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 17, 203238.Google Scholar
Shiller R.J. 1984 Stock prices and social dynamics. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 2, 457498.Google Scholar
Shiller R.J. 1989 Market Volatility. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Shiller R.J. 1993 Macro Markets: Creating Institutions for Managing Society's Largest Economic Risks. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Shiller R.J. 2000 Irrational Exuberance. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Shiller R.J. 2003 The New Financial Order: Risk in the 21st Century. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Shiller R.J. & P. Perron 1985 Testing the random walk hypothesis: Power versus frequency of observation. Economic Letters 18, 381386.Google Scholar
Siegel J.J. 2000 Big-cap tech stocks are a sucker bet. Wall Street Journal, Mar. 14, op-ed page.Google Scholar
Siegel J.J. 2002 Stocks for the Long Run. 3rd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill.
Sutch R.C. 1968 Expectations, Risk, and the Term Structure of Interest Rates. Ph.D. Dissertation, MIT.
Thaler R. & S. Rosen 1976 The value of saving a life: Evidence from the labor market. In N.E. Terleckyj (ed.), Household Production and Consumption. Studies in Income and Wealth, vol. 40. New York: NBER and Columbia University Press.