Langue
d'enseignement
d'enseignement
Anglais
Contenu
Given the intertemporal nature of most economic decisions, the role of expectations is central to macroeconomics. Until recently modern macroeconomic analysis typically relied heavily upon the full-information rational expectations paradigm, which assumes that economic agents are fully informed about their environment, and that they act on expectations that are rational given the available information. With the increased availability of well-designed survey data, a growing body of empirical work has questioned both these hypotheses, and a number of alternative models for expectations formation and equilibrium have been put forward.
The aim of this course is to discuss with the students some of the recent evidence on deviations from the full expectations rational expectations hypothesis. We will then talk about some of the recently proposed alternative models for expectations formation and equilibrium, focusing on work that relaxes rational expectations (rather than relaxing full information). For example, we will look at :
The aim of this course is to discuss with the students some of the recent evidence on deviations from the full expectations rational expectations hypothesis. We will then talk about some of the recently proposed alternative models for expectations formation and equilibrium, focusing on work that relaxes rational expectations (rather than relaxing full information). For example, we will look at :
- Models that introduce cognitive discounting of the future (e.g. McKay, Nakamura and Steinsson, 2017 and Gabaix, 2019).
- Diagnostic expectations, which overweigh more “representative” information (Bordalo, Gennaioli, and Shleifer, 2018, Bianchi, Ilut and Saijo, 2021).
- Models in which economic agents maintain as possible many models, but are unable to assign exact probabilities to any of these models (e.g. Ilut and Schneider, 2014).
- Models that relax the idea of common knowledge, introducing k-level thinking, (Garcıa-Schmidt and Woodford, 2019; Farhi and Werning, 2019)
Méthodes d'enseignement
This is an advanced class based mostly on the papers listed below. Students are expected to engage actively in the class, read the material ahead and participate in discussions.
The expectation is that the class will be taught in person, subject to the evolving situation with Covid-19.
The expectation is that the class will be taught in person, subject to the evolving situation with Covid-19.
Modes d'évaluation
des acquis des étudiants
des acquis des étudiants
For the evaluation students will prepare and present in class an extended "discussion" of a relevant paper to be chosen in agreement with the teacher of the course. The final grade is awarded based on the presentation.
What does "discussion" mean exactly? Academic conferences often feature a discussant, who speaks after the presenter of a paper. They generally summarise the paper and provide in depth comments on the paper being presented, highlighting the key contributions as well as the drawbacks and issues with the paper.
What does "discussion" mean exactly? Academic conferences often feature a discussant, who speaks after the presenter of a paper. They generally summarise the paper and provide in depth comments on the paper being presented, highlighting the key contributions as well as the drawbacks and issues with the paper.
Ressources
en ligne
en ligne
Slides and other relevant materials are available on Moodle.
Bibliographie
This class is based on the following papers, and other relevant ones that might appear between now and then.
- Angeletos, George-Marios, and Zhen Huo. 2021. "Myopia and Anchoring." American Economic Review, 111 (4): 1166-1200.
- Bianchi, F., C. Ilut and H. Saijo (2021), Diagnostic Business Cycles, mimeo https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Wr_apT8fyJqtQvTzUGzJGxkyfIUDsDuK/view
- Bordalo, P., N. Gennaioli, Y, Ma and A. Shleifer,« Overreaction in Macroeconomic Expectations », AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, VOL. 110, NO. 9, SEPTEMBER 2020
- Bordalo, P. Nicola Gennaioli, and Andrei Shleifer, “Diagnostic expectations and credit cycles,” The Journal of Finance, 2018, 73 (1), 199–227.
- Coibion, O. Y Gorodnichenko, S Kumar, M Pedemonte 2020. Inflation expectations as a policy tool? Journal of International Economics 124,
- Coibion, O. and Y. Gorodnichenko, « Information Rigidity and the Expectations Formation Process: A Simple Framework and New Facts » 2015. American Economic Review 105(8), 2644-2678.
- Farhi, Emmanuel, and Iván Werning. 2019. "Monetary Policy, Bounded Rationality, and Incomplete Markets." American Economic Review, 109 (11): 3887-3928.
- Gabaix, Xavier. 2019. “Behavioral Inattention.” Handbook of Behavioral Economics, 2: 261–344. https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/xgabaix/files/behavioral_inattention_02.pdf
- Gabaix X. A Behavioral New Keynesian Model. American Economic Review. 2020;110 (8) :2271-2327. https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/xgabaix/files/behavioral_new_keynesian_model.pdf
- García-Schmidt, Mariana, and Michael Woodford. 2019. "Are Low Interest Rates Deflationary? A Paradox of Perfect-Foresight Analysis." American Economic Review, 109 (1): 86-120.
- Ilut, Cosmin L., and Martin Schneider. 2014. "Ambiguous Business Cycles." American Economic Review, 104 (8): 2368-99.
- Masolo, R.M. and F. Monti, « Ambiguity, Monetary Policy and Trend Inflation, » Journal of the European Economic Association, Volume 19, Issue 2, April 2021, Pages 839–871,
- McKay, A., E. Nakamura and Jón Steinsson (2017) : The Discounted Euler Equation: A Note, Economica, 84, 820-831, October 2017 https://eml.berkeley.edu/~enakamura/papers/discountedEuler.pdf
Faculté ou entité
en charge
en charge
Programmes / formations proposant cette unité d'enseignement (UE)
Intitulé du programme
Sigle
Crédits
Prérequis
Acquis
d'apprentissage
d'apprentissage
Master [120] en sciences économiques, orientation économétrie