Roberto Rigobon

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Roberto Rigobon is the Society of Sloan Fellows Professor of Applied Economics at the MIT Sloan School of Management, a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a Visiting Professor at IESA. 

Roberto is a macro-economist who concentrates on measurement issues: economic, social, and ethical. He studies financial contagion, and the propagation of shocks through economic networks. He is one of the two founding members of the Billion Prices Project that produce alternative measures of inflation in many countries; And he is a cofounder and director of the Aggregate Confusion Project which studies how to improve ESG measures.

Roberto joined the business school in 1997. He has won s the Teacher of the Year Award five times, and the Excellence in Teaching Award three times at the Sloan School. He received his PhD in economics from MIT in 1997, an MBA from IESA (Venezuela) in 1991, and his BS in electrical engineering from Universidad Simon Bolivar (Venezuela) in 1984. 

He is married with three kids.

Honors

Rigobon receives Best Paper award

October 7, 2025

Financial Times recognizes MIT Sloan sustainability researchers and staff

September 30, 2025

Rigobon and colleagues win prize

August 23, 2023

Rigobon’s team wins 2022 Allocators’ Choice Award

November 30, 2022

Rigobon and colleagues win awards

September 14, 2020

Rigobon wins 2022 Teacher of the Year

Publications

"The Market for Voluntary Carbon Offsets."

Berg, Florian, Marco Ceccarelli, Florian Heeb, Alexey Ivashchenko, and Roberto Rigobon, MIT Sloan Working Paper 7345-25. Cambridge, MA: MIT Sloan School of Management, November 2025.

"Measuring by Executive Order."

Cavallo, Alberto and Roberto Rigobon, MIT Sloan Working Paper 7322-25. Cambridge, MA: MIT Sloan School of Management, October 2025. SSRN.

"Timing Sustainable Shareholder Proposals in Real Asset Investments."

van der Kroft, Bram, Juan Palacios, Roberto Rigobon, and Siqi Zheng, Working Paper. August 2025. SSRN.

"The Democratic Paradox in Large Language Models' Underestimation of Press Freedom."

Loaiza, Isabella, Roberto Vestrelli, Andrea Fronzetti Colladon, and Roberto Rigobon, MIT Sloan Working Paper 7323-25. Cambridge, MA: MIT Sloan School of Management, June 2025.

"On the Importance of Assurance in Carbon Accounting."

Berg, Florian, Jaime Oliver Huidobro, and Roberto Rigobon, MIT Sloan Working Paper 6969-24. Cambridge, MA: MIT Sloan School of Management, April 2025.

"The EPOCH of AI: Human-Machine Complementarities at Work."

Loaiza, Isabella and Roberto Rigobon, MIT Sloan Working Paper 7236-24. Cambridge, MA: MIT Sloan School of Management, December 2024.

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Press KSLTV

Are any jobs safe from AI?

These days, a lot of workers have been asking themselves whether AI is coming for their jobs. In a recent paper professor Roberto Rigobon and postdoctoral researcher Isabella Loaiza-Saa(SM '19, PhD '23) came up with a measure of how much AI might be used to augment selected jobs and then calculated a measure of the risk of being replaced by AI.

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Press Mashable

AI chatbots often distort nations' human rights records, study finds

A recent study by professor Roberto RigobonIsabella Loaiza, and co-authors showed that LLMs consistently suggested that countries have less press freedom than official reports. The study found the LLMs distorting and under-counting the press freedom in nations that actually place relatively few restrictions on journalists. "Access to reliable information on the state and health of the institutions that uphold democracy is critical for civic participation," said Rigobon.

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