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Money Illusion and Nominal Inertia in Experimental Asset Markets
Author(s) -
Charles Noussair,
Gregers Richter,
JeanRobert Tyran
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.1307717
Subject(s) - deflation , economics , shock (circulatory) , monetary economics , asset (computer security) , nominal interest rate , inflation (cosmology) , monetary policy , real interest rate , physics , computer security , computer science , medicine , theoretical physics
We test whether large but purely nominal shocks affect real asset market prices. We subject a laboratory asset market to an exogenous shock, which either inflates or deflates the nominal fundamental value of the asset, while holding the real fundamental value constant. After an inflationary shock, nominal prices adjust upward rapidly and we observe no real effects. However, after a deflationary shock, nominal prices display considerable inertia and real prices adjust only slowly and incompletely toward the levels that would prevail in the absence of a shock. Thus, an asymmetry is observed in the price response to inflationary and deflationary nominal shocks.

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