Robert J. Shiller, "Narrative Economics," January 26, 2017

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • Robert J. Shiller’s Director's Lecture, “Narrative Economics,” addressed narrative psychology in economics and its relation to economic inequality. How society has dealt with inequality in the past is deeply reflective of the narratives that shape our observations of blame and incentivization, Shiller argued. If inequality gets worse as technology continues to replace common labor, society will need to draw on insights from psychology, sociology, and institutional economics to address the problem in a durable way.

Комментарии • 24

  • @lawron2
    @lawron2 11 месяцев назад +1

    I could never get enough of Professor Shiller 😂😊

  • @karthikv1212
    @karthikv1212 7 лет назад +2

    Imagine you pay 100's of thousands to go listen to this. Mind bowing!!

  • @whatsup7184
    @whatsup7184 2 года назад

    LOLOLOLLLL.... feel happy to sit in this free lecture from this school as well as R. Schiller with interesting narrative financial facts.
    Thanks for U of Chicago.

  • @dvaf842
    @dvaf842 7 лет назад +2

    Is Levy just not interested or offended by Shiller publically implying that he did not vote for Trump. Levy seems not to enjoy this discussion/interview. Shiller's paper is only the start of including narratives in an economic framework. Shiller is opening the horizon for this research.

  • @roshannanayakkara5865
    @roshannanayakkara5865 Год назад

    Brilliant yet very simple man Robert Schiller

  • @michael14561
    @michael14561 5 лет назад +1

    Great lecture!

  • @TipoQueTocaelPiano
    @TipoQueTocaelPiano 7 лет назад

    Still loving this man

  • @TomerBenDavid
    @TomerBenDavid 7 лет назад

    Excellent I love how he explains

  • @tensevo
    @tensevo 7 лет назад +1

    I rarely read a narrative with the word narrative in it.

  • @JurijFedorov
    @JurijFedorov 6 лет назад +4

    Was the 9 min long intro really needed? It was bad as nearly all these intros are.

    • @qambi1
      @qambi1 4 года назад +1

      I skipped the initial 9 mins, Thanks

  • @TheAssOfBalaam
    @TheAssOfBalaam 6 лет назад

    @13:35 Drops ref to Gustav Le Bon's book "THE CROWD"
    We're in the deep cuts now!

  • @charleskirch2119
    @charleskirch2119 7 лет назад

    like Jim Grant you are ignoring the primary cause of the 1920 so called depression. The world war one economy ended during 1919 and the government and export orders, and they were very large relative to the us economy ended very rapidly, with the end of world war one.The epidemic of 1919 would also be an additional negative impact to gross demand in the US at the same time. So factories and labor saw lower capacity use . So the 1920 depression was resolved quickly because it was an external shock of export and federal demand and could be resolved by market adjustments . 1929 was due to the internal workings of the US economy and was intractable until world war 2.

  • @alinebaruchi1936
    @alinebaruchi1936 2 года назад

    Yeah, I knew.
    Dude
    Told you that human behavior is tough

  • @alinebaruchi1936
    @alinebaruchi1936 2 года назад

    I am onto it
    Relax

  • @deondavis7948
    @deondavis7948 3 года назад

    Robert shiller gets it

  • @cvvitale4813
    @cvvitale4813 7 лет назад

    "i think we should be talking to people of different disciplines"

  • @wouldbegood
    @wouldbegood 7 лет назад +2

    The truth is faith-based until we are force fed it by machines in a self-fulfilling prophecy circle-jerk. And then some genius re-writes the matrix maybe we don't need the machines (for everything).

  • @GunnarSohn
    @GunnarSohn 7 лет назад +1

    Karl Marx!