Behavioral Heterogeneity in U.S. Inflation Dynamics

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2019
Journal Journal of Business & Economic Statistics
Volume | Issue number 37 | 2
Pages (from-to) 288-300
Organisations
  • Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB) - Amsterdam School of Economics Research Institute (ASE-RI)
  • Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB)
Abstract

In this article we develop and estimate a behavioral model of inflation dynamics with heterogeneous firms. In our stylized framework there are two groups of price setters, fundamentalists and random walk believers. Fundamentalists are forward-looking in the sense that they believe in a present-value relationship between inflation and real marginal costs, while random walk believers are backward-looking, using the simplest rule of thumb, naive expectations, to forecast inflation. Agents are allowed to switch between these different forecasting strategies conditional on their recent relative forecasting performance. We estimate the switching model using aggregate and survey data. Our results support behavioral heterogeneity and the significance of evolutionary learning mechanism. We show that there is substantial time variation in the weights of forward-looking and backward-looking behavior. Although on average the majority of firms use the simple backward-looking rule, the market has phases in which it is dominated by either the fundamentalists or the random walk believers.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary materials
Language English
Related dataset Behavioral Heterogeneity in U.S. Inflation Dynamics
Published at https://doi.org/10.1080/07350015.2017.1321548
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85029439793
Downloads
8_7_2019_Behavioral (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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