Joseph Stiglitz
Organisations are still optimising for metrics that conceal the costs they are actually creating. GDP-linked targets and quarterly profit tell boards very little about regulatory exposure, inequality risk, or structural instability. The economic assumptions that once provided strategic cover are becoming political liabilities – and the frameworks used to replace them are still being contested.
When standard economic metrics mislead and markets fail in ways most strategic frameworks are not built to detect, organisations and policymakers turn to Joseph Stiglitz – Nobel laureate in economics, former Chief Economist of the World Bank, and chair of the international commission that produced the most widely adopted formal alternative to GDP as a measure of economic performance.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Joseph Stiglitz
- His Nobel Prize work demonstrated that markets systematically mis-price when participants have unequal access to information – a finding that maps directly onto corporate governance failures, credit risk models, and regulatory blind spots that boards encounter in practice.
- He is among the very few economists to have held operational control over both US domestic economic policy (Council of Economic Advisers) and global financial architecture (World Bank Chief Economist) – his critique of institutions carries authority because it comes from inside them.
- The commission he chaired for President Sarkozy in 2008 produced the framework now being advanced by the OECD as a formal alternative to GDP. Organisations engaged in ESG reporting, long-term value creation, and sustainability governance are already operating within the measurement landscape he helped design.
- The Price of Inequality (2012) and The Road to Freedom (2024) make the specific, evidence-based case that inequality is a structural drag on growth, market stability, and democratic governance – giving senior leaders a rigorous foundation for treating social outcomes as financial risk, not reputational noise.
- His analysis of globalisation – grounded in direct experience of how the IMF and World Bank made their most consequential decisions – gives organisations operating across emerging markets a more accurate model of where global financial governance fails and why.
Biography highlights
- Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (2001), shared with Akerlof and Spence, for the theory of markets with asymmetric information – a finding that reshaped economics and became standard in policy analysis
- University Professor at Columbia University, the institution’s highest academic rank, with appointments in Economics, SIPA, and Columbia Business School
- Chair of the US Council of Economic Advisers (1995-97) under President Clinton; Senior Vice President and Chief Economist of the World Bank (1997-2000)
- Chaired the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress (2008-09) at President Sarkozy’s request; published as Mismeasuring Our Lives; continues to chair the successor High-Level Expert Group at the OECD
- John Bates Clark Medal (1979); more than 40 honorary doctorates, including from Cambridge and Oxford; named by Time as one of the 100 most influential people in the world (2011)
- Author of more than 10 books for general audiences, including Globalization and Its Discontents (2002), The Price of Inequality (2012), and The Road to Freedom (2024)
- Lead author of the 1995 IPCC Report, which shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize; regular contributor to Project Syndicate; regular coverage in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Guardian
Biography
The strategic blind spot in most boardrooms is not a lack of data – it is a set of inherited economic assumptions that have been treated as fact. Markets clear. Prices reflect value. Deregulation improves outcomes. Joseph Stiglitz has spent five decades building the evidence against each of these claims, from the insurance market to the credit system to the global financial architecture.
His Nobel Prize in 2001 recognised the foundational work. In markets where some participants know more than others, the outcomes that standard models predict do not materialise. Credit gets rationed below efficient levels. Insurance markets produce worse aggregate outcomes than pooling would allow. Labour markets generate unemployment that wage adjustments alone cannot resolve. These are not edge cases – they are the structural features of every market senior leaders navigate.
Beyond the academy, Stiglitz has held the positions where those theories met consequences. He served as Chair of the US Council of Economic Advisers under Clinton and as Chief Economist of the World Bank. His subsequent criticism of those institutions – in Globalization and Its Discontents (2002) and The Price of Inequality (2012) – carries weight precisely because it was written by someone who watched the decisions being made.
His more recent work extends the argument into measurement and institutional design. The commission he chaired for President Sarkozy produced Mismeasuring Our Lives (2009), a formal challenge to GDP as a reliable indicator of economic and social progress. That work now underpins the OECD’s ongoing effort to develop performance metrics beyond output. His 2024 book, The Road to Freedom, argues that the economic assumptions embedded in most policy and business planning are deliberate choices – with identifiable costs. For organisations navigating inequality risk, regulatory exposure, and ESG pressure, the distinction matters.
Key speaking topics
- Information economics and market failure
- Economic inequality and structural risk
- Globalisation and its institutional consequences
- Beyond-GDP measurement and performance metrics
- Progressive capitalism and regulatory design
- Global financial architecture and reform
- Political economy of growth and distribution
Ideal for
- Boards, CFOs, and chief economists assessing macroeconomic risk and long-term structural exposure
- Policy-facing organisations, government affairs functions, and institutions engaged in regulatory strategy
- Organisations navigating ESG, sustainability reporting, and long-term value measurement
- Financial services and investment institutions operating across global and emerging markets
Audience outcomes
- A clearer understanding of why standard economic metrics – GDP, market efficiency assumptions, deregulation as growth driver – systematically obscure real performance and risk
- Insight into how information failures produce predictable market outcomes that corporate governance frameworks routinely miss
- A framework for interpreting the structural forces – inequality, regulatory shift, political backlash against globalisation – now reshaping the operating environment for large organisations
- Familiarity with the alternative performance metrics emerging from the OECD and the international standards community, and how they apply to strategic decision-making
- A more accurate model of where global financial governance fails and why – grounded in direct institutional experience at the World Bank and within the US government