Rational Expectations


Book Description




How Costly Will Reining in Inflation Be? It Depends on How Rational We Are


Book Description

We document that past highly inflationary episodes are often characterized by a steeper inflationslack relationship. We show that model-generated data from a standard small Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) model can replicate this empirical finding when estimated with different expectation formation processes. When inflation becomes de-anchored and expectations drift, we can observe high inflation even with a mildly positive output gap in response to cost-push shocks. The results imply that we should not use an unconditioned (not controlling for expectations change) Phillips curve estimated in normal times to predict the cost of reining in inflation. Our optimal policy exercises prescribe early monetary policy tightening and then easing in the context of positive output gaps and inflation far above the central bank target.







Rational Expectations


Book Description

What is Rational Expectations Rational expectations is an economic theory that seeks to infer the macroeconomic consequences of individuals' decisions based on all available knowledge. It assumes that individuals actions are based on the best available economic theory and information, and concludes that government policies cannot succeed by assuming widespread systematic error by individuals. How you will benefit (I) Insights, and validations about the following topics: Chapter 1: Rational expectations Chapter 2: Adaptive expectations Chapter 3: Macroeconomics Chapter 4: Inflation Chapter 5: New Keynesian economics Chapter 6: Phillips curve Chapter 7: Lucas critique Chapter 8: Macroeconomic model Chapter 9: Neutrality of money Chapter 10: John B. Taylor Chapter 11: Thomas J. Sargent Chapter 12: Edmund Phelps Chapter 13: Policy-ineffectiveness proposition Chapter 14: Lucas islands model Chapter 15: Neoclassical synthesis Chapter 16: New classical macroeconomics Chapter 17: NAIRU Chapter 18: History of macroeconomic thought Chapter 19: McCallum rule Chapter 20: Lucas aggregate supply function Chapter 21: Taylor contract (economics) (II) Answering the public top questions about rational expectations. (III) Real world examples for the usage of rational expectations in many fields. Who this book is for Professionals, undergraduate and graduate students, enthusiasts, hobbyists, and those who want to go beyond basic knowledge or information for any kind of Rational Expectations.










Rational Expectations


Book Description

This book develops the idea of rational expectations and surveys its use in economics today.




Expectations and the Rate of Inflation


Book Description

What is the effect of higher expectations of future inflation on current inflation? I compute this passthrough for a series of canonical firm-pricing models, but allowing for arbitrary (non-rational) expectations. In the Calvo model, the expectational-passthrough can be made arbitrarily close to zero for sufficiently high stickiness, but in practice, for reasonable parameters, passthrough is close to its upper bound of 1. In the Taylor model, in contrast, the upper bound for passthrough is 1⁄2 instead of 1. For a general time-dependent model I show that: (i) passthrough is given by a measurable sufficient statistic: the ratio of the average duration of ongoing price spells to that of completed price spells; (ii) the lowest theoretically possible passthrough equals 1⁄2 by Taylor pricing; and (iii) passthrough can be theoretically greater than 1 with hazards that decrease over time; (iv) breaking down the passthrough across horizons, it is expectations in the near future that matters the most, expectations of long-run inflation are completely irrelevant; (v) I provide a generalized Phillips curve for current inflation as a linear function of expectations of future inflation and realized past inflations; (vi) I show that the sum of all coefficients, both past and future, sums to one, so that the long-run Phillips curve is vertical. Finally, I study state-dependent "menu cost" models and show that passthrough in these models can be extremely low or extremely high, depending on the exact specification and inflation rate. I suggest a model where firms must pay a fixed cost for changing their sS pricing policy bands. This extension gives a passthrough of 0 for small enough changes in expectations.