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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = Robert J. Shiller
| name         = Robert J. Shiller
| birth_name = Robert James Shiller
| birth_name   = Robert James Shiller
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1946|3|29}}
| birth_date   = {{Birth date and age|1946|3|29}}
| birth_place = Detroit, Michigan, United States
| birth_place = [[Detroit]], [[Michigan]], United States
| nationality = American
| nationality = American
| occupation = Economist, academic, author
| occupation   = Economist, academic, author
| known_for = Cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio (CAPE/Shiller P/E), behavioral finance, housing market analysis, narrative economics
| known_for   = [[CAPE ratio]] (Shiller P/E Ratio), research on asset price volatility, [[behavioral economics]], [[narrative economics]]
| employer = Yale University
| employer     = [[Yale University]]
| title = Sterling Professor of Economics
| title       = Sterling Professor of Economics
| awards = Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2013), Global Economy Prize (2018)
| awards       = [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences]] (2013), Global Economy Prize (2018)
| website =  
| website     =  
}}
}}


Robert James Shiller (born March 29, 1946) is an American economist, academic, and author who serves as Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale University. One of the most influential figures in modern financial economics, Shiller received the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2013 for his "empirical analysis of asset prices," sharing the award with Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen.<ref name="yaledaily">{{cite news |date=2013-10-14 |title=Shiller wins Nobel Prize in Economics |url=https://yaledailynews.com/articles/shiller-wins-nobel-prize-in-economics |work=Yale Daily News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His research spans behavioral finance, real estate economics, and the role of psychology and narrative in shaping economic events. Shiller is the co-creator of the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices and the originator of the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio, commonly known as the CAPE ratio or Shiller P/E ratio, which has become a standard tool for assessing stock market valuations.<ref name="investopedia">{{cite web |title=CAPE Ratio Explained: Definition, Formula, and Market Insights |url=https://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/cape-ratio.asp |publisher=Investopedia |date=2025-08-24 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Throughout his career, Shiller has warned of speculative bubbles in both the stock and housing markets, most notably before the dot-com crash of 2000 and the housing crisis of 2007–2008. His books, including ''Irrational Exuberance'' and ''Narrative Economics'', have shaped public and scholarly discourse on the intersections of human behavior and market dynamics.
Robert James Shiller (born March 29, 1946) is an American economist, academic, and author who serves as Sterling Professor of Economics at [[Yale University]]. A foundational figure in the study of [[behavioral finance]] and [[asset pricing]], Shiller is best known for his empirical research demonstrating that financial markets are far more volatile than traditional efficient-market theories would predict. His work on speculative bubbles, particularly in the stock and housing markets, brought him wide public attention in the early 2000s, and his development of the [[cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio]] (CAPE ratio), also known as the Shiller P/E Ratio, has become one of the most closely watched valuation metrics in global finance.<ref name="investopedia">{{cite web |title=CAPE Ratio Explained: Definition, Formula, and Market Insights |url=https://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/cape-ratio.asp |publisher=Investopedia |date=August 24, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> In 2013, Shiller was awarded the [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences]], shared with [[Eugene Fama]] and [[Lars Peter Hansen]], for his "empirical analysis of asset prices."<ref name="ydn">{{cite news |title=Shiller wins Nobel Prize in Economics |url=https://yaledailynews.com/articles/shiller-wins-nobel-prize-in-economics |work=Yale Daily News |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Beyond his academic contributions, Shiller has been a prominent public intellectual, frequently offering commentary on market conditions, economic policy, and the role of human psychology in shaping economic outcomes. His books, including ''Irrational Exuberance'' and ''Narrative Economics'', have reached audiences well beyond the economics profession and have influenced how policymakers, investors, and the general public understand financial crises and market dynamics.


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Robert James Shiller was born on March 29, 1946, in Detroit, Michigan.<ref name="kiel">{{cite web |title=Robert Shiller |url=https://www.kielinstitut.de/events/prizes-and-awards/global-economy-prize/global-economy-prize-2018/robert-shiller/ |publisher=Kiel Institute for the World Economy |date=2025-11-18 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His father was an engineer and entrepreneur who owned a company that manufactured industrial products.<ref name="kiel" /> Growing up in the Detroit metropolitan area during the postwar economic boom, Shiller was exposed early to the dynamics of American industry and enterprise. The environment of mid-century Detroit a city defined by manufacturing, cyclical economic fortunes, and the intersection of technological innovation and labor — would later resonate in Shiller's academic interest in how economic narratives and psychological forces shape markets and communities.
Robert James Shiller was born on March 29, 1946, in [[Detroit]], [[Michigan]].<ref name="kiel">{{cite web |title=Robert Shiller |url=https://www.kielinstitut.de/events/prizes-and-awards/global-economy-prize/global-economy-prize-2018/robert-shiller/ |publisher=Kiel Institute for the World Economy |date=November 18, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> His father was an engineer and entrepreneur who owned a company that manufactured industrial products.<ref name="kiel" /> Growing up in a household where engineering and business intersected, Shiller developed an early interest in understanding systems—both mechanical and economic. The industrial landscape of postwar Detroit, a city at the center of American manufacturing, provided a formative backdrop for Shiller's later inquiries into the forces that drive economic booms and busts.


Details about Shiller's childhood and family life beyond his father's profession remain limited in published sources. However, his upbringing in an entrepreneurial household appears to have influenced his later intellectual curiosity about the forces that drive economic decision-making, risk-taking, and the stories people tell themselves about financial prospects.
Details of Shiller's childhood and adolescent years in Detroit remain limited in publicly available sources, but his trajectory from a Midwestern upbringing to the highest echelons of academic economics reflects a progression through the American educational system during a period of significant expansion in higher education and the social sciences. His father's entrepreneurial background likely exposed him early to the practical realities of business cycles, investment risk, and the unpredictability of markets—themes that would come to define his scholarly career.
 
== Education ==
 
Shiller pursued higher education in economics, ultimately earning his doctorate. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). His graduate training at MIT exposed him to both the rigorous quantitative methods that would define his empirical research and the emerging questions in financial economics about market efficiency and asset pricing that would become central to his career. After completing his doctoral studies, Shiller embarked on an academic career that would eventually bring him to Yale University, where he has remained for decades as a member of the economics faculty.


== Career ==
== Career ==
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=== Academic Career at Yale University ===
=== Academic Career at Yale University ===


Shiller joined the faculty of Yale University, where he rose to the rank of Sterling Professor of Economics one of the highest academic honors bestowed by the university.<ref name="ctpublic">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=2025-05-08 |title=Nobel-winning economist warns Trump's tariff tactics could spur economic pain |url=https://www.ctpublic.org/news/2025-05-08/nobel-winning-economist-warns-trumps-tariff-tactics-could-spur-economic-pain |work=Connecticut Public |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> As a longtime Yale economist, Shiller has conducted research across a broad range of topics in financial economics, macroeconomics, and behavioral economics. His tenure at Yale has been marked by prolific scholarship, the development of influential financial tools and indices, and sustained engagement with both academic audiences and the broader public.
Shiller joined the faculty of [[Yale University]], where he has spent the bulk of his academic career. He holds the title of Sterling Professor of Economics, one of the most prestigious academic appointments at Yale.<ref name="ctpublic">{{cite news |last= |first= |date=May 8, 2025 |title=Nobel-winning economist warns Trump's tariff tactics could spur economic pain |url=https://www.ctpublic.org/news/2025-05-08/nobel-winning-economist-warns-trumps-tariff-tactics-could-spur-economic-pain |work=Connecticut Public |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> From this position, Shiller has produced a body of research that spans asset pricing, behavioral economics, financial innovation, and macroeconomics. His work at Yale has been characterized by a willingness to challenge prevailing orthodoxies in economics, particularly the [[efficient-market hypothesis]], which holds that asset prices fully reflect all available information.


At Yale, Shiller has mentored generations of graduate students and has contributed to the university's reputation as a leading center for research in behavioral finance and asset pricing. His work has consistently challenged prevailing orthodoxies in economics, particularly the efficient-market hypothesis, by demonstrating the significant role that human psychology, social dynamics, and cultural narratives play in the determination of asset prices.
Shiller's early academic work focused on the volatility of stock prices. In a series of influential papers published in the early 1980s, he demonstrated that stock prices exhibited far greater fluctuations than could be explained by subsequent changes in dividends—a finding that posed a direct challenge to the efficient-market framework. This research helped lay the groundwork for the field of [[behavioral finance]], which incorporates insights from psychology into economic and financial theory.


=== The CAPE Ratio (Shiller P/E Ratio) ===
=== The CAPE Ratio (Shiller P/E Ratio) ===


Among Shiller's most enduring contributions to financial economics is the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio, widely known as the CAPE ratio or Shiller P/E ratio. The CAPE ratio assesses the stock market's pricing by adjusting past earnings for inflation over a ten-year period, thereby smoothing out short-term fluctuations in corporate earnings and providing a longer-term perspective on market valuations.<ref name="investopedia" /> Unlike the standard price-to-earnings ratio, which relies on a single year of earnings data and can be distorted by business cycle effects, the CAPE ratio offers a more stable and historically grounded measure of whether stocks are overvalued, undervalued, or fairly priced relative to their earnings history.
One of Shiller's most enduring contributions to financial economics is the [[cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio]], commonly known as the CAPE ratio or the Shiller P/E Ratio. The metric is calculated by dividing the current price of a stock market index by the average of ten years of earnings, adjusted for inflation. By smoothing out short-term fluctuations in earnings caused by the business cycle, the CAPE ratio provides a longer-term perspective on market valuations.<ref name="investopedia" />
 
The Shiller P/E ratio has become one of the most widely followed indicators among investors, analysts, and financial commentators. It has been used to identify periods of potential overvaluation in the stock market, including the run-up to the dot-com crash of 2000 and subsequent market corrections. As of November 2025, the Shiller P/E ratio was reported to be approaching levels seen in November 1999, just before the dot-com bubble burst, raising questions about whether an AI-driven bubble might be forming in equity markets.<ref name="npr">{{cite news |date=2025-11-13 |title=Is an AI bubble brewing? Shiller PE Ratio nears levels seen before dot-com crash |url=https://www.npr.org/2025/11/13/nx-s1-5604845/is-an-ai-bubble-brewing-shiller-pe-ratio-nears-levels-seen-before-dot-com-crash |work=NPR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>
 
Shiller's CAPE ratio has also been applied to international markets, where it has been used to compare valuations across countries and regions. In early 2026, analysis drawing on the CAPE framework highlighted the stark divergence in valuations between U.S. stocks and international markets, with some commentators citing Shiller's work in arguing that international stocks might offer better long-term returns given the relatively elevated pricing of the U.S. market.<ref name="motleyfool2026">{{cite news |date=2026-01-31 |title=Can International Stocks Outperform Once Again in 2026? Here's What Nobel Prize Economist Robert Shiller Has to Say. |url=https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/01/31/international-stocks-outperform-robert-shiller/ |work=The Motley Fool |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


=== Case-Shiller Home Price Indices ===
The CAPE ratio has become one of the most widely referenced indicators in financial analysis. According to Investopedia, the metric "assesses the stock market's pricing by adjusting past earnings for inflation over a" ten-year period, providing investors with a tool for evaluating whether markets may be overvalued or undervalued relative to historical norms.<ref name="investopedia" /> The ratio gained particular prominence during periods of market exuberance. In November 2025, NPR reported that the Shiller PE Ratio was "almost as high as it was in November 1999, just before the dot-com bubble burst," raising questions about whether an [[artificial intelligence]] investment bubble might be forming in financial markets.<ref name="npr">{{cite news |date=November 13, 2025 |title=Is an AI bubble brewing? Shiller PE Ratio nears levels seen before dot-com crash |url=https://www.npr.org/2025/11/13/nx-s1-5604845/is-an-ai-bubble-brewing-shiller-pe-ratio-nears-levels-seen-before-dot-com-crash |work=NPR |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


Shiller, in collaboration with economist Karl Case, developed the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices, a series of indices that track changes in the value of residential real estate across the United States. The indices, which use a repeat-sales methodology to measure price changes in the same properties over time, have become the standard benchmark for tracking trends in the U.S. housing market. They are widely referenced by policymakers, real estate professionals, and journalists as authoritative measures of housing price movements.
The metric has also been applied to comparative international analysis. In early 2026, The Motley Fool reported on Shiller's observations regarding the divergence in valuations between U.S. and international stock markets, noting that international stocks had outperformed U.S. stocks in 2025 and that "valuations are now miles apart between the U.S. and other markets."<ref name="fool-intl">{{cite news |date=January 31, 2026 |title=Can International Stocks Outperform Once Again in 2026? Here's What Nobel Prize Economist Robert Shiller Has to Say. |url=https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/01/31/international-stocks-outperform-robert-shiller/ |work=The Motley Fool |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> Shiller's use of the CAPE ratio to compare markets across countries has contributed to ongoing debates about portfolio diversification and the relative attractiveness of different global equity markets.


The development of the Case-Shiller indices was motivated in part by Shiller's research into speculative bubbles in housing markets. By creating a rigorous, transparent, and publicly available measure of housing prices, Shiller and Case provided a tool that enabled researchers, investors, and regulators to more accurately assess whether housing markets were experiencing unsustainable price increases. The indices gained particular prominence during the mid-2000s U.S. housing bubble and the subsequent financial crisis, as they documented the dramatic rise and fall of home prices across the country.
In November 2025, The Motley Fool reported on Shiller's long-term forecast for U.S. stocks, noting that his analysis "highlights the premise that investors should diversify their portfolios well beyond" domestic equities, given elevated U.S. valuations.<ref name="fool-warning">{{cite news |date=November 5, 2025 |title=Nobel Prize Winning Economist Robert Shiller Just Issued a Stark Warning For Investors -- Here's Where He Sees Stocks Heading Over the Next 10 Years |url=https://www.fool.com/investing/2025/11/05/nobel-laureate-robert-shiller-just-issued-warning/ |work=The Motley Fool |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


=== Behavioral Finance and Speculative Bubbles ===
=== Irrational Exuberance and Market Bubbles ===


Shiller is one of the foundational figures in behavioral finance, a field that integrates insights from psychology and other social sciences into the study of financial markets. His research has demonstrated that asset prices frequently deviate from the values predicted by standard models based on efficient markets and rational expectations. Instead, Shiller has argued, prices are significantly influenced by investor psychology, herd behavior, media narratives, and social contagion effects.
Shiller's 2000 book ''Irrational Exuberance''—its title borrowed from a phrase used by [[Federal Reserve]] Chairman [[Alan Greenspan]] in a 1996 speech—argued that the U.S. stock market was experiencing a speculative bubble driven by psychological factors, media amplification, and herd behavior rather than rational assessment of underlying economic fundamentals. The book was published just as the [[dot-com bubble]] reached its peak, and the subsequent market crash lent considerable credibility to Shiller's analysis.


His 2000 book ''Irrational Exuberance'' published at the peak of the dot-com bubble — warned that U.S. stock prices had reached unsustainable levels driven by speculative excess and irrational investor behavior. The book's title, borrowed from a phrase used by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in 1996, became a widely recognized shorthand for the dangers of speculative manias. When the dot-com crash followed shortly after the book's publication, Shiller's reputation as a prescient analyst of market bubbles was firmly established.
A second edition of ''Irrational Exuberance'', published in 2005, extended Shiller's analysis to the U.S. housing market, warning that housing prices had reached unsustainable levels. This warning proved prescient when the [[United States housing bubble]] collapsed in 2007–2008, triggering the [[global financial crisis]]. Shiller's ability to identify these bubbles before they burst established him as one of the foremost authorities on speculative market behavior.


Shiller subsequently updated ''Irrational Exuberance'' in 2005 to include analysis of the U.S. housing market, warning that housing prices had likewise entered bubble territory. The housing crash and global financial crisis of 2007–2008 further validated his analysis and brought renewed attention to his work on the role of speculation and psychology in asset pricing.
Shiller co-created the [[S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices]] (with economists [[Karl Case]] and [[Allan Weiss]]), which track changes in the value of residential real estate across the United States. These indices became critical tools for monitoring the housing market and are among the most frequently cited housing data in the United States.


=== Narrative Economics ===
=== Narrative Economics ===


In his later career, Shiller expanded his research agenda to encompass the concept of "narrative economics" — the study of how popular stories and narratives spread virally through the population and influence economic behavior and outcomes. His 2019 book ''Narrative Economics: How Stories Go Viral & Drive Major Economic Events'' presents a systematic framework for understanding how narratives about economic conditions, technological innovations, and policy changes can shape consumer confidence, investment decisions, and macroeconomic trends.
In his later career, Shiller expanded his research agenda to explore the role of popular narratives—stories that spread virally through populations—in shaping economic behavior. This line of inquiry culminated in his 2019 book ''Narrative Economics: How Stories Go Viral & Drive Major Economic Events''. In the book, Shiller argues that economic fluctuations are driven not only by traditional macroeconomic variables but also by the contagious spread of narratives that influence consumer confidence, investment decisions, and policy choices.


In ''Narrative Economics'', Shiller draws on epidemiological models to describe how economic narratives spread in a manner analogous to the transmission of infectious diseases, rising in prominence, reaching a peak, and then fading, only to re-emerge in mutated forms in subsequent periods. He applies this framework to historical episodes including the Great Depression, the rise of the "new economy" narrative in the late 1990s, and various real estate booms.
A review of ''Narrative Economics'' published by the [[International Monetary Fund]] (IMF), written by Jonathan Portes of [[King's College London]], examined Shiller's thesis that viral stories play a central role in driving major economic events.<ref name="imf">{{cite web |title=Book Review: Narrative Economics by Robert J. Shiller, IMF F&D |url=https://www.imf.org/en/publications/fandd/issues/2020/03/book-review-narrative-economics-portes |publisher=International Monetary Fund |date=November 20, 2025 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> The concept of narrative economics has gained traction among economists and policymakers seeking to understand phenomena such as the rapid spread of economic pessimism during recessions and the role of social media in amplifying market sentiment.
 
The book has been reviewed and discussed in academic and policy circles. A review published by the International Monetary Fund, written by Jonathan Portes of King's College London, examined Shiller's thesis and its implications for understanding how viral stories drive major economic events.<ref name="imfreview">{{cite web |title=Book Review: Narrative Economics by Robert J. Shiller, IMF F&D |url=https://www.imf.org/en/publications/fandd/issues/2020/03/book-review-narrative-economics-portes |publisher=International Monetary Fund |date=2025-11-20 |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref>


=== Public Commentary and Policy Engagement ===
=== Public Commentary and Policy Engagement ===


Throughout his career, Shiller has been an active public commentator on economic and financial issues, contributing regularly to news media, academic journals, and public policy discussions. He has used his platform to warn about asset price bubbles, advocate for financial innovation that protects ordinary consumers, and discuss the psychological dimensions of economic policy.
Throughout his career, Shiller has been an active participant in public discourse on economic and financial matters. He has frequently commented on market conditions, economic policy, and the psychological dimensions of economic decision-making.


In May 2025, Shiller publicly commented on the potential economic consequences of tariff policies under the Trump administration, warning that aggressive tariff tactics could spur economic pain and drawing parallels between the global trade uncertainty of the period and historical episodes of protectionism.<ref name="ctpublic" /> His commentary reflected a broader pattern throughout his career of applying historical and behavioral analysis to contemporary economic policy debates.
In May 2025, Shiller offered analysis of the potential economic consequences of tariff policies under the administration of President [[Donald Trump]]. Connecticut Public reported that Shiller "sees difficult economic times ahead and draws parallels between today's global trade uncertainty" and previous episodes of protectionist economic policy.<ref name="ctpublic" /> His willingness to address current policy debates has made him a frequently consulted voice in financial media and economic policy discussions.


In November 2025, Shiller issued a long-term forecast for U.S. stocks that highlighted the possibility of subdued returns over the following decade, given the elevated levels of the CAPE ratio. He emphasized the premise that investors should diversify their portfolios beyond U.S. equities, pointing to the relatively more attractive valuations available in international markets.<ref name="motleyfool2025">{{cite news |date=2025-11-05 |title=Nobel Prize Winning Economist Robert Shiller Just Issued a Stark Warning For Investors -- Here's Where He Sees Stocks Heading Over the Next 10 Years |url=https://www.fool.com/investing/2025/11/05/nobel-laureate-robert-shiller-just-issued-warning/ |work=The Motley Fool |access-date=2026-02-24}}</ref> This warning attracted considerable media attention and was subsequently cited in analyses of international stock market prospects heading into 2026.<ref name="motleyfool2026" />
Shiller has also used his public platform to advocate for greater financial literacy and for policy innovations designed to reduce the economic risks faced by ordinary households, including proposals for new types of financial instruments linked to income and housing values.


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==
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=== Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences ===
=== Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences ===


In 2013, Shiller was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, which he shared with Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences cited all three laureates for their "empirical analysis of asset prices."<ref name="yaledaily" /> The award recognized Shiller's contributions to understanding how asset prices move over time, particularly his demonstrations that stock prices exhibit excess volatility relative to what would be predicted by models based solely on changes in dividends and other fundamentals. His work showed that while asset prices are difficult to predict in the short run, they display predictable patterns over longer horizons — a finding that has had profound implications for investment practice and financial regulation.
In 2013, Shiller was awarded the [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences]], shared with [[Eugene Fama]] and [[Lars Peter Hansen]], for their "empirical analysis of asset prices."<ref name="ydn" /> The Yale Daily News reported that Shiller won the prize on a Monday, recognizing his decades of work demonstrating that asset prices are influenced by factors beyond the predictions of efficient-market models.<ref name="ydn" /> The joint award was notable for pairing Shiller—whose work emphasized the role of irrational behavior and speculative bubbles in driving asset prices—with Fama, who is closely associated with the [[efficient-market hypothesis]]. The Nobel Committee's decision to honor both scholars acknowledged the importance of their respective, and in some respects competing, contributions to understanding financial markets.
 
The Nobel Prize brought wider public recognition to Shiller's decades of research and reinforced his status as one of the leading economists of his generation. The award was noted in the Yale Daily News, which reported that the Yale community celebrated the honor for one of its most prominent faculty members.<ref name="yaledaily" />


=== Global Economy Prize ===
=== Global Economy Prize ===


In 2018, Shiller was awarded the Global Economy Prize by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, an honor recognizing his contributions to the understanding of the global economy.<ref name="kiel" /> The Kiel Institute highlighted Shiller's research on asset prices, speculative bubbles, and behavioral finance as central to his selection for the prize.
In 2018, Shiller received the Global Economy Prize from the [[Kiel Institute for the World Economy]], a German research institution focused on international economic policy. The award recognized Shiller's contributions to understanding global economic dynamics and financial markets.<ref name="kiel" />


=== Other Honors ===
=== Influence on Financial Analysis ===


Shiller's work has been recognized through numerous other honors and distinctions throughout his career, including fellowships and honorary degrees. His CAPE ratio and Case-Shiller Home Price Indices are among the most widely used financial tools in the world, a form of recognition that extends beyond formal awards to reflect the practical impact of his research on financial markets, investment practice, and economic policy.
Beyond formal prizes, Shiller's influence is evident in the widespread adoption of the CAPE ratio as a standard tool of financial analysis. The metric is regularly cited by investment professionals, financial journalists, and central bankers as a benchmark for assessing market valuations.<ref name="investopedia" /><ref name="npr" /> The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices, which Shiller co-developed, are among the most frequently referenced measures of U.S. housing market conditions and are used by the [[Federal Reserve]], the [[U.S. Department of the Treasury]], and private sector analysts.


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Robert Shiller's contributions to economics have shaped both academic research and practical finance in lasting ways. His insistence on the importance of human psychology, narrative, and irrational behavior in financial markets challenged the dominance of efficient-market theory and helped establish behavioral finance as a major field within economics. The CAPE ratio, which he developed, has become a standard tool for assessing long-term stock market valuations and continues to be cited in major financial analyses decades after its introduction. As of late 2025, the CAPE ratio was the subject of widespread discussion as it approached levels associated with previous market bubbles, underscoring the ongoing relevance of Shiller's analytical framework.<ref name="npr" />
Shiller's contributions to economics have shaped both academic research and practical financial analysis. His empirical demonstrations of excess volatility in stock prices challenged the prevailing efficient-market consensus of the late twentieth century and helped establish [[behavioral finance]] as a recognized field within economics. The CAPE ratio, which he developed, has become a standard reference point for assessing whether equity markets are overvalued or undervalued, and it continues to be applied by analysts and investors globally. In November 2025, NPR's reporting on the CAPE ratio's approach to dot-com era levels illustrated the continued relevance of Shiller's analytical framework to contemporary market debates.<ref name="npr" />


The Case-Shiller Home Price Indices transformed the measurement and monitoring of U.S. housing markets, providing a transparent and reliable benchmark that has been used by regulators, policymakers, and market participants to assess housing market conditions. The indices played a critical role in documenting the 2000s housing bubble and its aftermath, and they remain the standard reference for U.S. residential real estate price trends.
His warnings about speculative bubbles in both the stock market (in 2000) and the housing market (in 2005) were borne out by subsequent events, establishing a track record of identifying systemic risks before they materialized into full-blown financial crises. The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices remain central to housing market analysis in the United States and have influenced the development of similar indices in other countries.


Shiller's concept of narrative economics has opened a new avenue of research in the social sciences, encouraging scholars to investigate how popular stories and their viral spread influence economic behavior. By drawing on epidemiological models and interdisciplinary methods, Shiller has broadened the toolkit available to economists and social scientists seeking to understand the forces that drive major economic events.
Shiller's concept of narrative economics, articulated in his 2019 book, has opened a new area of inquiry within the economics profession. By examining how stories spread through populations and influence economic behavior, Shiller has provided a framework for understanding economic phenomena that resist explanation by traditional models focused solely on rational actors and quantifiable variables.<ref name="imf" />


Beyond his academic contributions, Shiller has served as a model for the publicly engaged economist — one who combines rigorous scholarship with accessible communication and a willingness to address pressing policy questions. His warnings about speculative excess, his advocacy for financial innovation that serves the public interest, and his engagement with media and policy audiences have set a standard for the role that academic economists can play in public life.
His long tenure at Yale University has produced generations of students trained in the intersection of economics, finance, and psychology. His public engagement—through books, media appearances, and commentary on policy debates—has contributed to broader public understanding of financial markets and their potential vulnerabilities.<ref name="ctpublic" />


As economic conditions in the mid-2020s raised new questions about asset price sustainability, trade policy, and the impact of technological change, Shiller's research and public commentary continued to be cited as essential reference points for understanding the challenges and uncertainties facing the global economy.<ref name="ctpublic" /><ref name="motleyfool2025" /><ref name="motleyfool2026" />
As of the mid-2020s, Shiller continued to be an active and frequently consulted voice in discussions of market valuation, international diversification, and the economic implications of policy decisions, including trade policy and the potential formation of new speculative bubbles in areas such as artificial intelligence.<ref name="fool-intl" /><ref name="fool-warning" /><ref name="npr" />


== References ==
== References ==
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[[Category:Financial economists]]
[[Category:Nobel laureates in Economics]]
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[[Category:Yale University faculty]]
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[[Category:Fellows of the Econometric Society]]
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Latest revision as of 02:29, 25 February 2026


Robert J. Shiller
BornRobert James Shiller
29 3, 1946
BirthplaceDetroit, Michigan, United States
NationalityAmerican
OccupationEconomist, academic, author
TitleSterling Professor of Economics
EmployerYale University
Known forCAPE ratio (Shiller P/E Ratio), research on asset price volatility, behavioral economics, narrative economics
AwardsNobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2013), Global Economy Prize (2018)

Robert James Shiller (born March 29, 1946) is an American economist, academic, and author who serves as Sterling Professor of Economics at Yale University. A foundational figure in the study of behavioral finance and asset pricing, Shiller is best known for his empirical research demonstrating that financial markets are far more volatile than traditional efficient-market theories would predict. His work on speculative bubbles, particularly in the stock and housing markets, brought him wide public attention in the early 2000s, and his development of the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio (CAPE ratio), also known as the Shiller P/E Ratio, has become one of the most closely watched valuation metrics in global finance.[1] In 2013, Shiller was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, shared with Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen, for his "empirical analysis of asset prices."[2] Beyond his academic contributions, Shiller has been a prominent public intellectual, frequently offering commentary on market conditions, economic policy, and the role of human psychology in shaping economic outcomes. His books, including Irrational Exuberance and Narrative Economics, have reached audiences well beyond the economics profession and have influenced how policymakers, investors, and the general public understand financial crises and market dynamics.

Early Life

Robert James Shiller was born on March 29, 1946, in Detroit, Michigan.[3] His father was an engineer and entrepreneur who owned a company that manufactured industrial products.[3] Growing up in a household where engineering and business intersected, Shiller developed an early interest in understanding systems—both mechanical and economic. The industrial landscape of postwar Detroit, a city at the center of American manufacturing, provided a formative backdrop for Shiller's later inquiries into the forces that drive economic booms and busts.

Details of Shiller's childhood and adolescent years in Detroit remain limited in publicly available sources, but his trajectory from a Midwestern upbringing to the highest echelons of academic economics reflects a progression through the American educational system during a period of significant expansion in higher education and the social sciences. His father's entrepreneurial background likely exposed him early to the practical realities of business cycles, investment risk, and the unpredictability of markets—themes that would come to define his scholarly career.

Career

Academic Career at Yale University

Shiller joined the faculty of Yale University, where he has spent the bulk of his academic career. He holds the title of Sterling Professor of Economics, one of the most prestigious academic appointments at Yale.[4] From this position, Shiller has produced a body of research that spans asset pricing, behavioral economics, financial innovation, and macroeconomics. His work at Yale has been characterized by a willingness to challenge prevailing orthodoxies in economics, particularly the efficient-market hypothesis, which holds that asset prices fully reflect all available information.

Shiller's early academic work focused on the volatility of stock prices. In a series of influential papers published in the early 1980s, he demonstrated that stock prices exhibited far greater fluctuations than could be explained by subsequent changes in dividends—a finding that posed a direct challenge to the efficient-market framework. This research helped lay the groundwork for the field of behavioral finance, which incorporates insights from psychology into economic and financial theory.

The CAPE Ratio (Shiller P/E Ratio)

One of Shiller's most enduring contributions to financial economics is the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio, commonly known as the CAPE ratio or the Shiller P/E Ratio. The metric is calculated by dividing the current price of a stock market index by the average of ten years of earnings, adjusted for inflation. By smoothing out short-term fluctuations in earnings caused by the business cycle, the CAPE ratio provides a longer-term perspective on market valuations.[1]

The CAPE ratio has become one of the most widely referenced indicators in financial analysis. According to Investopedia, the metric "assesses the stock market's pricing by adjusting past earnings for inflation over a" ten-year period, providing investors with a tool for evaluating whether markets may be overvalued or undervalued relative to historical norms.[1] The ratio gained particular prominence during periods of market exuberance. In November 2025, NPR reported that the Shiller PE Ratio was "almost as high as it was in November 1999, just before the dot-com bubble burst," raising questions about whether an artificial intelligence investment bubble might be forming in financial markets.[5]

The metric has also been applied to comparative international analysis. In early 2026, The Motley Fool reported on Shiller's observations regarding the divergence in valuations between U.S. and international stock markets, noting that international stocks had outperformed U.S. stocks in 2025 and that "valuations are now miles apart between the U.S. and other markets."[6] Shiller's use of the CAPE ratio to compare markets across countries has contributed to ongoing debates about portfolio diversification and the relative attractiveness of different global equity markets.

In November 2025, The Motley Fool reported on Shiller's long-term forecast for U.S. stocks, noting that his analysis "highlights the premise that investors should diversify their portfolios well beyond" domestic equities, given elevated U.S. valuations.[7]

Irrational Exuberance and Market Bubbles

Shiller's 2000 book Irrational Exuberance—its title borrowed from a phrase used by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in a 1996 speech—argued that the U.S. stock market was experiencing a speculative bubble driven by psychological factors, media amplification, and herd behavior rather than rational assessment of underlying economic fundamentals. The book was published just as the dot-com bubble reached its peak, and the subsequent market crash lent considerable credibility to Shiller's analysis.

A second edition of Irrational Exuberance, published in 2005, extended Shiller's analysis to the U.S. housing market, warning that housing prices had reached unsustainable levels. This warning proved prescient when the United States housing bubble collapsed in 2007–2008, triggering the global financial crisis. Shiller's ability to identify these bubbles before they burst established him as one of the foremost authorities on speculative market behavior.

Shiller co-created the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices (with economists Karl Case and Allan Weiss), which track changes in the value of residential real estate across the United States. These indices became critical tools for monitoring the housing market and are among the most frequently cited housing data in the United States.

Narrative Economics

In his later career, Shiller expanded his research agenda to explore the role of popular narratives—stories that spread virally through populations—in shaping economic behavior. This line of inquiry culminated in his 2019 book Narrative Economics: How Stories Go Viral & Drive Major Economic Events. In the book, Shiller argues that economic fluctuations are driven not only by traditional macroeconomic variables but also by the contagious spread of narratives that influence consumer confidence, investment decisions, and policy choices.

A review of Narrative Economics published by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), written by Jonathan Portes of King's College London, examined Shiller's thesis that viral stories play a central role in driving major economic events.[8] The concept of narrative economics has gained traction among economists and policymakers seeking to understand phenomena such as the rapid spread of economic pessimism during recessions and the role of social media in amplifying market sentiment.

Public Commentary and Policy Engagement

Throughout his career, Shiller has been an active participant in public discourse on economic and financial matters. He has frequently commented on market conditions, economic policy, and the psychological dimensions of economic decision-making.

In May 2025, Shiller offered analysis of the potential economic consequences of tariff policies under the administration of President Donald Trump. Connecticut Public reported that Shiller "sees difficult economic times ahead and draws parallels between today's global trade uncertainty" and previous episodes of protectionist economic policy.[4] His willingness to address current policy debates has made him a frequently consulted voice in financial media and economic policy discussions.

Shiller has also used his public platform to advocate for greater financial literacy and for policy innovations designed to reduce the economic risks faced by ordinary households, including proposals for new types of financial instruments linked to income and housing values.

Recognition

Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences

In 2013, Shiller was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, shared with Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen, for their "empirical analysis of asset prices."[2] The Yale Daily News reported that Shiller won the prize on a Monday, recognizing his decades of work demonstrating that asset prices are influenced by factors beyond the predictions of efficient-market models.[2] The joint award was notable for pairing Shiller—whose work emphasized the role of irrational behavior and speculative bubbles in driving asset prices—with Fama, who is closely associated with the efficient-market hypothesis. The Nobel Committee's decision to honor both scholars acknowledged the importance of their respective, and in some respects competing, contributions to understanding financial markets.

Global Economy Prize

In 2018, Shiller received the Global Economy Prize from the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, a German research institution focused on international economic policy. The award recognized Shiller's contributions to understanding global economic dynamics and financial markets.[3]

Influence on Financial Analysis

Beyond formal prizes, Shiller's influence is evident in the widespread adoption of the CAPE ratio as a standard tool of financial analysis. The metric is regularly cited by investment professionals, financial journalists, and central bankers as a benchmark for assessing market valuations.[1][5] The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices, which Shiller co-developed, are among the most frequently referenced measures of U.S. housing market conditions and are used by the Federal Reserve, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and private sector analysts.

Legacy

Shiller's contributions to economics have shaped both academic research and practical financial analysis. His empirical demonstrations of excess volatility in stock prices challenged the prevailing efficient-market consensus of the late twentieth century and helped establish behavioral finance as a recognized field within economics. The CAPE ratio, which he developed, has become a standard reference point for assessing whether equity markets are overvalued or undervalued, and it continues to be applied by analysts and investors globally. In November 2025, NPR's reporting on the CAPE ratio's approach to dot-com era levels illustrated the continued relevance of Shiller's analytical framework to contemporary market debates.[5]

His warnings about speculative bubbles in both the stock market (in 2000) and the housing market (in 2005) were borne out by subsequent events, establishing a track record of identifying systemic risks before they materialized into full-blown financial crises. The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices remain central to housing market analysis in the United States and have influenced the development of similar indices in other countries.

Shiller's concept of narrative economics, articulated in his 2019 book, has opened a new area of inquiry within the economics profession. By examining how stories spread through populations and influence economic behavior, Shiller has provided a framework for understanding economic phenomena that resist explanation by traditional models focused solely on rational actors and quantifiable variables.[8]

His long tenure at Yale University has produced generations of students trained in the intersection of economics, finance, and psychology. His public engagement—through books, media appearances, and commentary on policy debates—has contributed to broader public understanding of financial markets and their potential vulnerabilities.[4]

As of the mid-2020s, Shiller continued to be an active and frequently consulted voice in discussions of market valuation, international diversification, and the economic implications of policy decisions, including trade policy and the potential formation of new speculative bubbles in areas such as artificial intelligence.[6][7][5]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "CAPE Ratio Explained: Definition, Formula, and Market Insights".Investopedia.August 24, 2025.https://www.investopedia.com/terms/c/cape-ratio.asp.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "Shiller wins Nobel Prize in Economics".Yale Daily News.https://yaledailynews.com/articles/shiller-wins-nobel-prize-in-economics.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Robert Shiller".Kiel Institute for the World Economy.November 18, 2025.https://www.kielinstitut.de/events/prizes-and-awards/global-economy-prize/global-economy-prize-2018/robert-shiller/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Nobel-winning economist warns Trump's tariff tactics could spur economic pain".Connecticut Public.May 8, 2025.https://www.ctpublic.org/news/2025-05-08/nobel-winning-economist-warns-trumps-tariff-tactics-could-spur-economic-pain.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "Is an AI bubble brewing? Shiller PE Ratio nears levels seen before dot-com crash".NPR.November 13, 2025.https://www.npr.org/2025/11/13/nx-s1-5604845/is-an-ai-bubble-brewing-shiller-pe-ratio-nears-levels-seen-before-dot-com-crash.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Can International Stocks Outperform Once Again in 2026? Here's What Nobel Prize Economist Robert Shiller Has to Say.".The Motley Fool.January 31, 2026.https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/01/31/international-stocks-outperform-robert-shiller/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "Nobel Prize Winning Economist Robert Shiller Just Issued a Stark Warning For Investors -- Here's Where He Sees Stocks Heading Over the Next 10 Years".The Motley Fool.November 5, 2025.https://www.fool.com/investing/2025/11/05/nobel-laureate-robert-shiller-just-issued-warning/.Retrieved 2026-02-24.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Book Review: Narrative Economics by Robert J. Shiller, IMF F&D".International Monetary Fund.November 20, 2025.https://www.imf.org/en/publications/fandd/issues/2020/03/book-review-narrative-economics-portes.Retrieved 2026-02-24.