Publication
Aug 2011
This paper presents a simple experiment on how lay people form macroeconomic expectations. Subjects have to forecast inflation and GDP growth. By varying the information provided in different treatments, we can assess the importance of historical time-series information versus information acquired outside the experimental setting such as knowledge of expert forecasts. It turns out that the availability of historical data has a dominant impact on expectations and wipes out the influence of outside-lab information completely. Consequently, backward-looking behavior can be identified unambiguously as a decisive factor in expectation formation.
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English (PDF, 29 pages, 770 KB) |
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Author | Michael W M Roos, Ulrich Schmidt |
Series | Kiel Institute Working Papers |
Issue | 1723 |
Publisher | Kiel Institute for the World Economy |
Copyright | © 2011 Kiel Institute for the World Economy |