Survey Measurement of Probabilistic Macroeconomic Expectations: Progress and Promise
Charles Manski
NBER Macroeconomics Annual, 2018, vol. 32, issue 1, 411 - 471
Abstract:
Economists commonly suppose that persons have probabilistic expectations for uncertain events, yet empirical research measuring expectations was long rare. The inhibition against collection of expectations data has gradually lessened, generating a substantial body of recent evidence on the expectations of broad populations. This paper first summarizes the history leading to development of the modern literature and overviews its main concerns. I then describe research on three subjects that should be of direct concern to macroeconomists: expectations of equity returns, inflation expectations, and professional macroeconomic forecasters. I also describe work that questions the assumption that persons have well defined probabilistic expectations and communicate them accurately in surveys. Finally, I consider the evolution of thinking about expectations formation in macroeconomic policy analysis. I favorably observe the increasing willingness of theorists to study alternatives to rational expectations assumptions, but I express concern that models of expectations formation will proliferate in the absence of empirical research to discipline thinking. To make progress, I urge measurement and analysis of the revisions to expectations that agents make following occurrence of unanticipated shocks.
Date: 2018
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Chapter: Survey Measurement of Probabilistic Macroeconomic Expectations: Progress and Promise (2017)
Working Paper: Survey Measurement of Probabilistic Macroeconomic Expectations: Progress and Promise (2017) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ucp:macann:doi:10.1086/696061
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