Robert Shiller Quotes
Collection of top 22 famous quotes about Robert Shiller
Robert Shiller Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Robert Shiller quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
I don't want to be the anchor around his feet. I want to be the sky. I want to be the colorful weird name.
— Pella Grace
Economics is (now) about emotion and psychology.
— Robert J. Shiller
I would really have liked to have gone to Broadway with 'A Streetcar Named Desire.' I was proud of that.
— Cate Blanchett
Somehow, talking to young students brings you back to reality - it should, anyway.
— Robert J. Shiller
But there were some who went with her willingly, for there are other women who dream of lying with wolves.
— John Connolly
I am worried that the collapse of home prices might turn out to be the most severe since the Great Depression.
— Robert J. Shiller
You can only work on yourself. Start there.
— Alice O. Howell
moved back to Paris, and I divided my
— Suzanne Munshower
I have a big, flamboyant, open personality, which I think is why people may be saying these nice things about me.
— Kate Hudson
Nothing.
That's what happens to the stepmother in Cinderella.
Nothing. — Melissa Kantor
That's what happens to the stepmother in Cinderella.
Nothing. — Melissa Kantor
My Life is My Message
— Mahatma Gandhi
Maybe it is not important to go to bed together but get up the following day and make a cup of tea for the other?
— Janusz Leon Wisniewski
Look around, and you see everywhere the exertions and acts of individuals restricted, regulated, or promoted, on the principle of the common welfare.
— Friedrich List
I've never been a bad boy.
— John Mayer
Money management has been a profession involving a lot of fakery - people saying they can beat the market, and they really can't.
— Robert J. Shiller
The ability to focus attention on important things is a defining characteristic of intelligence.
— Robert J. Shiller
We ought to recognise the profound gulf between the work to which we are 'called' and the work we are forced into as a means of livelihood.
— Dorothy L. Sayers