Disagreement About Inflation Expectations
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Nber Working Paper Series Imperfect Information And
NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES IMPERFECT INFORMATION AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY N. Gregory Mankiw Ricardo Reis Working Paper 15773 http://www.nber.org/papers/w15773 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 February 2010 We are grateful to students at Columbia University and Faculdade de Economia do Porto for sitting through classes that served as the genesis for this survey, and to Stacy Carlson, Benjamin Friedman, John Leahy, and Neil Mehrotra for useful comments. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer- reviewed or been subject to the review by the NBER Board of Directors that accompanies official NBER publications. © 2010 by N. Gregory Mankiw and Ricardo Reis. All rights reserved. Short sections of text, not to exceed two paragraphs, may be quoted without explicit permission provided that full credit, including © notice, is given to the source. Imperfect Information and Aggregate Supply N. Gregory Mankiw and Ricardo Reis NBER Working Paper No. 15773 February 2010 JEL No. D8,E1,E3 ABSTRACT This paper surveys the research in the past decade on imperfect information models of aggregate supply and the Phillips curve. This new work has emphasized that information is dispersed and disseminates slowly across a population of agents who strategically interact in their use of information. We discuss the foundations on which models of aggregate supply rest, as well as the micro-foundations for two classes of imperfect information models: models with partial information, where agents observe economic conditions with noise, and models with delayed information, where they observe economic conditions with a lag. -
The Process of Inflation Expectations' Formation
The Process of Inflation Expectations’ * Formation Anna Loleyt** Ilya Gurov*** Bank of Russia July 2010 Abstract The aim of the investigation is to classify and systematize groups of economic agents with different types of inflation expectations in information economy. Particularly it’s found out that it is not feasible to exclude the possibility of current signals perception by economic agents. The analysis has also shown that there is an uncertainty in economy when authorities redeem monetary policy promises, but their action wouldn’t influence on average inflation expectations of economic agents. The investigation results testify the flat existence of agents in economy which are characterizing with rational, quasi-adaptive (including adaptive) and also arbitral inflation expectations. Keywords: information economy, information signal, information perception, agent belief in information, inflation expectations, quasi-adaptive expectations, arbitral expectations. *Acknowledgments: The first authors gratefully acknowledge support through the Bank of Russia. Especially we would like to thank Mr. Alexey V. Ulyukaev for helpful research assistance and Mrs. Nadezhda Yu. Ivanova for strong support. We are also grateful to Mr. Sergey S. Studnikov for his comments. **General Economic Department, Bank of Russia, 12 Neglinnaya Street, Moscow, 107016 Russia Faculty of Economics, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Email: [email protected] ***General Economic Department, Bank of Russia, 12 Neglinnaya Street, Moscow, 107016 Russia Faculty of Economics, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Email: [email protected] Abbreviations: a variety of information signals. W an element of a variety of information signals that is an information signal. w economic agents. x q a number of signals. -
Inattentive Consumers
Inattentive Consumers Ricardo Reis∗ Department of Economics and Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA Abstract This paper studies the consumption decisions of agents who face costs of acquiring, absorbing and processing information. These consumers rationally choose to only sporadically update their information and re-compute their optimal consumption plans. In between updating dates, they remain inattentive. This behavior implies that news disperses slowly throughout the population, so events have a gradual and delayed effect on aggregate consumption. The model predicts that aggregate consumption adjusts slowly to shocks, and is able to explain the excess sensitivity and excess smoothness puzzles. In addition, individual consumption is sensitive to ordinary and unexpected past news, but it is not sensitive to extraordinary or predictable events. The model further predicts that some people rationally choose to not plan, live hand-to-mouth, and save less, while other people sporadically update their plans. The longer are these plans, the more they save. Evidence using U.S. aggregate and microeconomic data generally supports these predictions. JEL classification codes: E2, D9, D1, D8 ∗I am grateful to N. Gregory Mankiw, Alberto Alesina, Robert Barro, and David Laibson for their guidance and to Andrew Abel, Susanto Basu, John Campbell, Larry Christiano, Mariana Colacelli, Benjamin Friedman, Jens Hilscher, Yves Nosbusch, David Romer, John Shea, Monica Singhal, Adam Szeidl, Bryce Ward, Justin Wolfers, and numerous seminar participants for useful comments. The Fundação Ciência e Tecnologia, Praxis XXI and the Eliot Memorial fellowship provided financial support. Tel.: +1-609-258-8531; fax: +1-609-258-5349. E-mail address: [email protected]. -
Econ 281 Syllabus - Part 2
Econ 281 Syllabus - Part 2 Instructor: Johannes Wieland 1 Requirements See Ross Starr’s syllabus. I expect you to have read the starred papers on the reading list before class. 2 Class presentations Everyone attending class must present a non-starred paper from this syllabus or from Ross’s syllabus. This includes those auditing the class unless there are no more slots left. Papers must be picked by the end of week 6. 3 Preliminary outline 1. Lecture 1 (11/2/2015): Introduction. Firm credit frictions — amplification and propagation. ∗ Ben S Bernanke and Mark Gertler. Agency costs, net worth, and business fluctuations. American Economic Review, 79(1):14–31, 1989 ∗ Charles T Carlstrom and Timothy S Fuerst. Agency costs, net worth, and business fluctuations: A computable general equilibrium analysis. The American Economic Review, pages 893–910, 1997 2. Lecture 2 (11/4/2015): Firm credit frictions — dynamic amplification and empirical evidence. ∗ Ben S Bernanke, Mark Gertler, and Simon Gilchrist. The financial accelerator in a quantitative business cycle framework. Handbook of macroeconomics, 1:1341–1393, 1999 ∗ Ben S Bernanke. Nonmonetary effects of the financial crisis in the propagation of the great depression. The American Economic Review, 73(3):257–276, 1983 ∗ Mark Gertler and Simon Gilchrist. Monetary policy, business cycles, and the behavior of small manufacturing firms. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, pages 309–340, 1994 Markus K Brunnermeier and Yuliy Sannikov. A macroeconomic model with a financial sector. The American Economic Review, 104(2):379–421, 2014 1 Markus K Brunnermeier, Thomas M Eisenbach, and Yuliy Sannikov. Macroeconomics with fi- nancial frictions: A survey. -
The Constraint on Public Debt When R<G but G<M
The constraint on public debt when r < g but g < m Ricardo Reis LSE March 2021 Abstract With real interest rates below the growth rate of the economy, but the marginal prod- uct of capital above it, the public debt can be lower than the present value of primary surpluses because of a bubble premia on the debt. The government can run a deficit forever. In a model that endogenizes the bubble premium as arising from the safety and liquidity of public debt, more government spending requires a larger bubble pre- mium, but because people want to hold less debt, there is an upper limit on spending. Inflation reduces the fiscal space, financial repression increases it, and redistribution of wealth or income taxation have an unconventional effect on fiscal capacity through the bubble premium. JEL codes: D52, E62, G10, H63. Keywords: Debt limits, debt sustainability, incomplete markets, misallocation. * Contact: [email protected]. I am grateful to Adrien Couturier and Rui Sousa for research assistance, to John Cochrane, Daniel Cohen, Fiorella de Fiore, Xavier Gabaix, N. Gregory Mankiw, Jean-Charles Rochet, John Taylor, Andres Velasco, Ivan Werning, and seminar participants at the ASSA, Banque de France - PSE, BIS, NBER Economic Fluctuations group meetings, Princeton University, RIDGE, and University of Zurich for comments. This paper was written during a Lamfalussy fellowship at the BIS, whom I thank for its hospitality. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, INFL, under grant number No. GA: 682288. First draft: November 2020. 1 Introduction Almost every year in the past century (and maybe longer), the long-term interest rate on US government debt (r) was below the growth rate of output (g). -
Adaptive Expectations Versus Rational Expectations: Evidence from the Lab
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Repositori Institucional de la Universitat Jaume I Adaptive Expectations versus Rational Expectations: Evidence from the lab Annarita Colasante1, Antonio Palestrini, Alberto Russo, Mauro Gallegati Universit`aPolitecnica delle Marche, Piazzale Martelli 8, Ancona, Italy. Abstract The aim of the present work is to shed light on the extensive debate about expectations in financial market. We analyze the behavior of subjects in an exper- imental environment in which it is possible to directly observe expectations since the sole task of each player is to predict the future price of an asset. We investi- gate the mechanism of expectation formation in two different contexts: in the first, the fundamental value is constant; in the second, the fundamental price increases over repetitions. First of all we observe if, according to the main results shown in Palestrini and Gallegati (2015), there is a convergence to the rational equilibrium even if agents have adaptive expectations. Moreover, we concentrate on the accu- racy of aggregate forecasts compared with the individual forecasts. We find that there is collective rationality instead of individual rationality. In the context of increasing fundamental value, contrary to the theoretical predictions, players are able to capture the trend but they underestimate that value. This implies that if all agents make their forecasts according to an adaptive scheme, there is no full convergence to the rational expectations equilibrium. Keywords: Price forecasting, Financial market, Experiment, Panel data, Forecasting practice 1. Introduction The recent financial crisis highlighted the importance of agents' behaviour in the financial market and, in turn, the impact of individual financial choices in the real economy. -
A New Keynesian Model with Heterogeneous Expectations
ARTICLE IN PRESS Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control 33 (2009) 1036–1051 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jedc A New Keynesian model with heterogeneous expectations William A. Branch a, Bruce McGough b,Ã a University of California, Irvine, USA b Department of Economics, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97330, USA article info abstract Article history: Within a New Keynesian model, we incorporate bounded rationality at the individual Received 30 January 2008 agent level, and we determine restrictions on expectations operators sufficient to imply Accepted 14 November 2008 aggregate IS and AS relations of the same functional form as those under rationality. This Available online 14 February 2009 result provides dual implications: the strong nature of the restrictions required to JEL classification: achieve aggregation serve as a caution to researchers—imposing heterogeneous E52 expectations at an aggregate level may be ill-advised; on the other hand, accepting E32 the necessary restrictions provides for tractable analysis of expectations heterogeneity. D83 As an example, we consider a case where a fraction of agents are rational and the D84 remainder are adaptive, and find specifications that are determinate under rationality may possess multiple equilibria in case of expectations heterogeneity. Keywords: & 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Heterogeneous expectations Monetary policy Adaptive learning Aggregation 1. Introduction During the -
Imperfect Macroeconomic Expectations: Yes, But, We Disagree∗
Imperfect Macroeconomic Expectations: Yes, But, We Disagree∗ Ricardo Reis LSE June 2020 1 Introduction I have been doing research on expectations in macroeconomics for twenty years. When I started, back in the year 2000, almost every model assumed rational expectations. There were no alternative assumptions that were simultaneously (i) tractable across models, (ii) consistent within each model, and (iii) with few parameters to set. At the same time, most empirical studies of survey data rejected the null hypothesis of rational expectations. In the data, people’s stated forecast errors turned out to be sometimes biased, often persis- tent, and always inefficient. At the time, it felt that progress required new models to fill this gap. So, this is what I did, writing models of sticky information and inattentiveness that only had one parame- ter to calibrate, that could be inserted as assumptions in any model of dynamic decisions, and that were as easy to solve as models with rational-expectations (Mankiw and Reis, 2002, 2010). Many others were in the same pursuit, and in these two decades the theoreti- cal literature has flourished with models of expectation that are as good or better in satis- fying these criteria, including: dispersed private information (Woodford, 2003, Angeletos and Lian, 2016), rational inattention (Sims, 2003, Mackowiak, Matejka and Wiederholt, ∗Contact: [email protected]. I am grateful to Adrien Couturier and Jose Alberto Ferreira for research assistance. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and inno- vation programme, INFL, under grant number No. GA: 682288. -
Overview of Models and Methods for Measuring Economic Agent's Expectations
Overview of models and methods for measuring economic agent's expectations Tine Janžek, Petra Ziherl Abstract Agents' expectations play an important role as one of the basic building blocks of theoretical macroeconomic models. In practise, though, their intangible nature has always caused consistency difficulties regarding their measurement and estimation methods. Increased importance and use of econometric modelling in contemporary financial stability analyses has triggered numerous advances in methods for measuring empirical expectations. Due to the shortage of empirical data for a more detailed evaluation of expectation measures, this article focuses more on the presentation of the most commonly established methods for their capturing and the methodological aspect of the prevailing models. KEYWORDS: expectations, rational expectations, surveys, qualitative measures, quantitative measures, probabilistic measures, visual analog scale, probability approach, regression approach, inflation, VAR. Expectation examination approaches Modern economic theory recognizes that the main difference between economics and natural sciences lies in the forward-looking decisions made by economic agents. Expectations play a key role in every segment of macroeconomics. In consumption theory the paradigm life-cycle and permanent income approaches stress the role of expected future incomes. In investment decisions present-value calculations are conditional on expected future prices and sales. Asset prices (equity prices, interest rates, and exchange rates) also clearly depend on expected future prices. Today we can distinct two major expectation paradigms and concepts, where the second became the mainstream approach for further development of expectation examination: Adaptive expectations (AE) represent a hypothesis in economics which states that people form their expectations about what will happen in the future based on what has happened in the past. -
A Dynamic Measure of Inflation
A dynamic measure of in‡ation Ricardo Reis Columbia University April 2009 Abstract This paper shows that conventional measures of cost-of-living in‡ation, based on static models of consumption, su¤er from two problems. The …rst is an intertemporal substitution bias, as these measures neglect the ability of consumers to borrow and lend in response to price changes. The second problem is the omission of intertemporal prices, which capture relevant relative prices for a consumer who lives for many periods. I propose a dynamic price index (DPI) that solves these problems. Theoretically, I show that the DPI: is forward-looking, responds by more to persistent shocks, includes assets prices, and distinguishes between durable and non-durable goods’ prices. Dynamic in‡ation in the United States from 1970 to 2008 di¤ers markedly from the CPI, it is close to serially uncorrelated, it is mostly driven by the prices of houses and bonds, and it is twice as high as the CPI in 2008. JEL classi…cation: E31, C43, J26, D91. Keywords: Consumer price index; COLI; Bequests; Retirement accounts; Endowments. I am grateful to many colleagues and seminar participants (too many to list) for useful comments and suggestions during the long gestation of this paper. Alisdair Mckay provided excellent research assistance. Contact: [email protected]. 1 Three questions arise if prices are uncertain and change over time: 1. If you have two children, one year apart, and wish to give each a bequest at a certain age, how much more should you give the younger one relative to what you gave the older one, so that they are equally well-o¤, in spite of the di¤erent prices they face? 2. -
The Misspecification of Expectations in New Keynesian Models: a DSGE
The Misspecification of Expectations in New Keynesian Models: A DSGE-VAR Approach Stephen J. COLE Fabio MILANI∗ Department of Economics Department of Economics University of California, Irvine University of California, Irvine April, 2014 Abstract This paper tests the ability of popular New Keynesian models, which are traditionally used to study monetary policy and business cycles, to match the data regarding a key channel for monetary transmission: the dynamic interactions between macroeconomic variables and their corresponding expectations. In the empirical analysis, we exploit direct data on expectations from surveys. To explain the joint evolution of realized variables and expectations, we adopt a DSGE-VAR approach, which allows us to estimate all models in the continuum between the extremes of an unrestricted VAR, on one side, and a DSGE model in which the cross-equation restrictions are dogmatically imposed, on the other side. Moreover, the DSGE-VAR approach allows us to assess the extent, as well as the main sources, of misspecification in the model. The paper’s results illustrate the failure of New Keynesian models under the rational expec- tations hypothesis to account for the dynamic interactions between observed macroeconomic expectations and macroeconomic realizations. Confirming previous studies, DSGE restrictions prove valuable when the New Keynesian model is exempted from matching observed expecta- tions. But when the model is required to match data on expectations, it can do so only by moving away, and hence substantially rejecting, DSGE restrictions. Finally, we investigate alternative models of expectations formation, including examples of extrapolative and heterogeneous expectations, and show that they can go some way toward reconciling the New Keynesian model with the data. -
The Formation of Expectations, Inflation and the Phillips Curve 1
The Formation of Expectations, Inflation and the Phillips Curve Olivier Coibion Yuriy Gorodnichenko Rupal Kamdar UT Austin & NBER UC Berkeley & NBER UC Berkeley March 25th , 2017 Abstract This paper argues for a careful (re)consideration of the expectations formation process and a more systematic inclusion of real-time expectations through survey data in macroeconomic analyses. While the rational expectations revolution has allowed for great leaps in macroeconomic modeling, the surveyed empirical micro-evidence appears increasingly at odds with the full-information rational expectation assumption. We explore models of expectation formation that can potentially explain why and how survey data deviate from full-information rational expectations. Using the New Keynesian Phillips curve as an extensive case study, we demonstrate how incorporating survey data on inflation expectations can address a number of otherwise puzzling shortcomings that arise under the assumption of full-information rational expectations. Keywords: Expectations, Inflation, Surveys JEL Codes: E3, E4, E5 1. Introduction Macroeconomists have long recognized the central role played by expectations: nearly all economic decisions contain an intertemporal dimension such that contemporaneous choices depend on agents’ perceptions about future economic outcomes. How agents form those expectations should therefore play a central role in macroeconomic dynamics and policy-making. While full-information rational expectations (FIRE) have provided the workhorse approach for modeling expectations for the past few decades, the increasing availability of detailed micro-level survey-based data on subjective expectations of individuals has revealed that expectations deviate from FIRE in systematic and quantitatively important ways including forecast-error predictability and bias. 1 How should we interpret these results from survey data? In this paper, we tackle this question by first reviewing the rise of the FIRE assumption and some of the successes that it has achieved.