1. Monetary policy under behavioral expectations: Theory and experiment
- Author
-
Matthias Weber, Cars Hommes, Domenico Massaro, Behavioural Economics, Equilibrium, Expectations & Dynamics / CeNDEF (ASE, FEB), and Faculteit Economie en Bedrijfskunde
- Subjects
Inflation ,Economics and Econometrics ,jel:D84 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Heterogeneous expectations ,finance ,Experimental macroeconomics ,Rational planning model ,Settore SECS-P/01 - ECONOMIA POLITICA ,business studies ,0502 economics and business ,New Keynesian economics ,Economics ,Behavioral macroeconomics ,050207 economics ,Real interest rate ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Rational expectations ,jel:C90 ,Experimental Macroeconomics, Heterogeneous Expectations, Learning to forecast Experiment, Trade-off Inflation and Output Gap ,Keynesian economics ,05 social sciences ,Monetary policy ,Learning-to-forecast experiment ,jel:E52 ,Behavioral modeling ,Behavioral macroeconomics, Experimental macroeconomics, Heterogeneous expectations, Learning-to-forecast experiment ,Macroeconomic model ,Output gap ,8. Economic growth ,Volatility (finance) ,Heuristics - Abstract
Expectations play a crucial role in modern macroeconomic models. We replace the common assumption of rational expectations in a New Keynesian framework by the assumption that expectations are formed according to a heuristics switching model that has performed well in earlier work. We show how the economy behaves under these assumptions with a special focus on inflation volatility. Contrary to comparable models based on full rationality, the behavioral model predicts that inflation volatility can be lowered if the central bank reacts to the output gap in addition to inflation. We test the opposing theoretical predictions with a learning to forecast experiment. The experimental results support the behavioral model and the claim that reacting to the output gap in addition to inflation can indeed lower inflation volatility.
- Published
- 2019