Born in
Chicago, Cochrane received a
BS in
physics from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1979, and a
PhD in
economics from the
University of California, Berkeley in 1986. From 2009 to 2010, he was President of the
American Finance Association, on whose board of directors he served from 2003 to 2006. In several articles (including one in the
Journal of Finance in 1991, and the
Journal of Political Economy in 1996), he develops and tests a "production-based asset pricing model" based on the
q-theory of investment. In two 1992 articles, Cochrane emphasized some features of asset prices which are difficult to account for, such as the predictability of equity returns, and the longterm equity premium. His more recent work, with
Monika Piazzesi, studies
bond markets. In particular, in a number of papers, Cochrane and Piazzesi study the predictability of bond returns. In recent blog posts and comments, Cochrane tends to focus more on inflation, debt, and the financial impacts brought by COVID-19. In a 2021 post called "Inflation, debt, politics, and insurance at
Project Syndicate", Cochrane thinks that whether inflation surge is transitory or continuous or not depends on central banks and the government. If the government doesn't respond to inflation with joint fiscal and monetary stabilization policies, inflation will most likely erupt, and the economy will be in the shadow of debt and slow economic growth.
Fiscal Theory of the Price Level Cochrane's research from the mid-2010s up through to the present day incorporates a
fiscal theory of the price level, or the theory that inflation is affected by more factors than simply the supply of money (a consensus that originally formed around the work of
monetarist economist
Milton Friedman). Cochrane asserts that as governments and central banks accrue more debt, along with the general public losing confidence in that same government to pay the debt back, inflation is adversely affected. As long as governments incur debt and are able to pay the debt off in a timely manner, then inflation is not majorly realized in the form of consumer price increases across the board felt by consumers.
Other contributions Cochrane has interests in diverse fields of economics, including asset markets, financial crisis and regulations, monetary and fiscal policies, and health insurance. Cochrane has worked on the
fiscal theory of the price level, on the debate between permanent and temporary shocks in macroeconomic fluctuations, and the cost of near-rational behavior. Cochrane also developed an online class called "Asset Pricing" that is free and opens to anyone who is interested in learning more about this area. By registering through
Canvas, students and faculty who intend to learn more about
asset pricing will have the opportunities to take this class and complete relevant quizzes and exams. ==
Asset Pricing ==