The latest by and about Dr. Robert J. Shiller, Nobel prize winner and author of Irrational Exuberance. Independent and unaffiliated.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Is Economics a Science?
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Sunday, October 20, 2013
Robert Shiller: A Skeptic and a Nobel Winner
Robert J. Shiller, a professor at Yale, learned on Monday that he had won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science, along with Lars Peter Hansen and Eugene F. Fama of the University of Chicago. The Nobel committee described Professor Shiller as a founder of the field of behavioral finance, an innovator in incorporating psychology into economics and a pioneering analyst of speculative bubbles in the stock and real estate markets.
He is also one of a group of eminent economists who write the Economic View column for Sunday Business, and has contributed 60 of those columns since August 2007. As the editor of that column, I have talked to him often about his work, and on Wednesday, he called me from the airport en route to a lecture at the Dutch central bank in Amsterdam. Here is an edited, condensed version of that conversation.
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Housing Market Is Heating Up, if Not Yet Bubbling
Friday, September 20, 2013
The Best, Brightest, and Least Productive?
In the United States, 7.4% of total compensation of employees in 2012 went to people working in the finance and insurance industries. Whether or not that percentage is too high, the real issue is that the share is even higher among the most educated and accomplished people, whose activities may be economically and socially useless, if not harmful.
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Sunday, August 18, 2013
Why Innovation Is Still Capitalism’s Star
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Wednesday, July 17, 2013
Bubbles Forever
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Sunday, July 14, 2013
Owning a Home Isn’t Always a Virtue
ENCOURAGING homeownership has been considered a national goal at least since “Own Your Own Home Day” was introduced in 1920 by various business and civic groups as part of a National Thrift Week. The newly popular word “homeownership” represented a goal and a virtue for every good citizen — to get out of the tenements and into one’s own home. Homeownership was thought to encourage planning, discipline, permanency and community spirit.
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Sunday, June 9, 2013
Want to Fix Social Security? Use the Right Wrench
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Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Austerity and Demoralization
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Saturday, May 18, 2013
Reflections on Finance and the Good Society
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Sunday, April 28, 2013
Today’s Dream House May Not Be Tomorrow’s
Economic and demographic changes may severely impair the value of a home when it’s time to sell, a decade or more in the future. Will a particular home still be fashionable then? Will social and economic shifts tilt demand toward new designs and types of communities —even toward renting rather than an outright purchase? Any of these factors could affect home prices substantially.
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Saturday, April 20, 2013
Before Housing Bubbles, There Was Land Fever
Fundamental factors like inflation and construction costs affect home prices, of course. But the radical shifts in housing prices in recent years were caused mainly by investor-induced speculation.
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Sunday, April 14, 2013
Why Home Prices Change (or Don’t)
Most people live in their home for many years. They don’t need to view it as an investment at all, but if they do, they surely need a long forecasting horizon.
The problem is that modern economics has a poor understanding of past movements in home prices. And that makes the task of predicting the state of the market in 2023 challenging, at the very least. Still, we can learn something by analyzing the factors that affect home prices in general.
There has been some good news lately: home prices have risen over the last year, and with those gains there has been a renewed sense of optimism. But do these price increases mean that homes are now good investments for the long haul?
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Thursday, March 21, 2013
Debt-Friendly Stimulus
NEW HAVEN – With much of the global economy apparently trapped in a long and painful austerity-induced slump, it is time to admit that the trap is entirely of our own making. We have constructed it from unfortunate habits of thought about how to handle spiraling public debt.
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Yes, We’re Confident, but Who Knows Why
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Housing Market's Future Still Has Many Clouds
WE'RE beginning to hear noises that we've reached a major turning point in the housing market - and that, with interest rates so low, this is a rare opportunity to buy. But are such observations on target? It would be comforting if they were. Yet the unfortunate truth is that the tea leaves don't clearly suggest any particular path for prices, either up or down.
Friday, January 11, 2013
A Metaphor for Obama
NEW HAVEN – As US President Barack Obama begins his second term, he needs a simple way to express his vision and policies for the economy – a metaphor around which support for his policies might crystallize, thereby boosting his administration’s political effectiveness. So, what makes a successful metaphor work?