Subjective Models of the Macroeconomy: Evidence from Experts and Representative Samples

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We study people's subjective models of the macroeconomy and shed light on their attentional foundations. To do so, we measure beliefs about the effects of macroeconomic shocks on unemployment and inflation, providing respondents with identical information about the parameters of the shocks and previous realizations of macroeconomic variables. Within samples of 6,500 US households and 1,500 experts, beliefs are widely dispersed, even about the directional effects of shocks, and there are large differences in average beliefs between households and experts. Part of this disagreement seems to arise because respondents think of different propagation channels of the shocks, in particular demand- vs. supply-side mechanisms. We provide evidence on the role of associative memory in driving heterogeneity in thoughts and forecasts: contextual cues and prior experiences shape which propagation channels individuals retrieve and thereby which forecasts they make. Our findings offer a new perspective on the widely documented disagreement in macroeconomic expectations.

Original languageEnglish
JournalReview of Economic Studies
Volume89
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)2958-2991
ISSN0034-6527
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Review of Economic Studies Limited.

    Research areas

  • Associations, Attention, D83, D84, E31, E52, E71, Expectation formation, Experiences, Fiscal policy, Macroeconomic shocks, Monetary policy, Subjective models, Thoughts

ID: 334351383