Thursday, May 17, 2012

Economics Roundtable: Robert Shiller

March 6, 2010 by biotechconnection.com · 11 Comments 


Yale economist Robert Shiller argues that the stock market is explained by investor psychology, not the internet or globalization as others claim. Shiller forecast the collapse of the last bubble in 2000 and offers insight here into assessing risk in the 21st century. Series: “Economics Roundtable” [11/2003] [Public Affairs] [Show ID: 8202]

Comments

11 Responses to “Economics Roundtable: Robert Shiller”
  1. 1888junkteam says:

    excellent work!

  2. GhostWoof says:

    I love this guy! He’s freaking funny and sucks at talking. Listen to his “UMM”s
    Funny at he beginning. He’s like Finance and Ensurance will be part of our everyday lives. Then he’s like, “No it’s not. It’s risk taking,” Love him for his terrible use of English. My Dad also I think listens to him and says Andrew Redleaf is worse! Check him out.

  3. demirparcasi says:

    He is very hard to follow. I think that he doesn’t really know what he is talking about.

  4. MrAlanKendall says:

    This is all too complicated for me. I see three major cycles that drive all investments; the dollar/inflation drives commodities, hiring drives economic growth and foreclosures drive Real Estate Prices.

  5. dankbot420 says:

    that beat in the beginning is dope

  6. bpineda182 says:

    I wish people really understood where our money comes from and how it really works, and who really owns it. This is just pure BULLSH!T

  7. dollarbear1 says:

    It is ignorant for some of you to think that politicians have anything to do with the economy. The role of the govt. was marginalized during the Wilson administration which introduced the banking cartel called Federal Reserve Corporation. Please watch
    Zeitgeist : The Federal Reserve on youtube if you want to understand how the “Fed” took control of the US government.

  8. stealthswimmer says:

    The economy did so well under the Clinton administration in spite of Bill Clinton, not because of him. Most of the advabcements were made because of the Fed, not Bill Clinton.

  9. shilei1352 says:

    excellent!!! thank you for posting

  10. Richardgwm says:

    Under Bill Clinton, the S&P 500 soared 210%. Since George Bush took office, the S&P 500 has gained 2%. That’s not 2% per year. That is 2% over the entire 7+ years.

    We cannot afford another four years of George Bush economics under John McCain.

  11. nsnook says:

    Thanks for posting, I really enjoyed the video. It is nice to see him discuss more than the ‘housing crisis’ for which he seems to garner so much (though very warranted) attention.