Ricardo J. Caballero

Ricardo J. Caballero
Born (1959-10-20) 20 October 1959
Santiago, Chile
Academic background
Alma materPontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (B.S.)

Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (M.A.)

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Ph.D.)
Doctoral advisorOlivier Blanchard
Stanley Fischer
Academic work
DisciplineMacroeconomics
InstitutionsMassachusetts Institute of Technology
Columbia University
Doctoral studentsEmmanuel Farhi
Alp Simsek
Petya Koeva-Brooks
William R. Kerr
Pablo Kurlat
Carmen Taveras
Fernando Duarte
Marcello Estevão
Jonathan A. Parker
Giuseppe Moscarini
Roberto Rigobon
Annette Vissing-Jørgensen
Mark Aguiar
Guido Lorenzoni
Fernando Broner
Claudio E. Raddatz K.
Thomas Philippon
Stavros Panageas
Tatiana Didier
Sergi Basco
Jonathan Goldberg
Olivier Wang
Nathan Zorzi
Ali Kakhbod
David B. Gross
Tanya Rosenblat
Kevin Cowan
James Vickery
Maya Eden
Nada Mora
Pablo García Silva
Andrew Hetzberg
Björn Brügemann
Herman Bennett
Layne Kirshon
Joseph Doyle
Plamen Nenov
AwardsBdf-TSE Senior Prize in Monetary Economics and Finance (2022)
Fellow of the Econometric Society (1998)
Frisch Medal (2002)
Smith Breeden Prize (2008)
Brattle Group Prize (2014)
Website

Ricardo Jorge Caballero (born 20 October 1959) is a Chilean macroeconomist who is the Ford International Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He also served as the Chairman of MIT's Economic Department from 2008 to 2011. He is a director of the World Economic Laboratory at MIT and an NBER Research Associate. Caballero received his PhD from MIT in 1988, and he taught at Columbia University before returning to the MIT faculty.

Recently, Caballero's work has focused on Risk-Centric Macroeconomics and Safe Assets. He has also studied the aggregate behavior of economies with heterogeneous agents, the macroeconomic effects of irreversible investment in firm-specific assets, and Schumpeterian theories of technological progress through creative destruction.