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Household Informedness and Long‐Run Inflation Expectations: Experimental Evidence
Author(s) -
Binder Carola,
Rodrigue Alex
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
southern economic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.762
H-Index - 58
eISSN - 2325-8012
pISSN - 0038-4038
DOI - 10.1002/soej.12306
Subject(s) - inflation (cosmology) , perfect information , economics , econometrics , rational expectations , survey of professional forecasters , monetary policy , monetary economics , microeconomics , physics , theoretical physics
This article uses an experiment embedded in a survey to analyze the response of consumers' long‐run inflation expectations to information about the Federal Reserve's inflation target and past inflation. On average, respondents revise forecasts toward the 2% target with either information treatment. Forecast uncertainty and heterogeneity decline with the treatments, but remain substantial. Since the information in the treatments is publicly available, these findings are consistent with models of imperfect information in which agents do not fully and continually update their information sets or incorporate all available information into their expectations. Response to treatments varies with prior informedness and with demographic characteristics.