The determination of stock prices and equilibrium expected rates of return in a general equilibrium setting is still imperfectly understood. In particular, as Grossman and Shiller (1981) and others have argued, stock returns appear to be too volatile given the smooth process for dividends and consumption growth. Mehra and Prescott (1985) claim that this smoothness in consumption and dividend growth gives rise to an “equity premium paradox” since it makes it impossible to explain the equity risk premium with a risk aversion parameter of less than an implausible 35. This paper reconciles the apparent smoothness of aggregate dividends and the volatility of observed stock prices by developing a model of stock prices in a dynamic general equilib...