What Can Survey Forecasts Tell Us About Informational Rigidities?
O. Coibion, and Y. Gorodnichenko. Working Paper, 14586. National Bureau of Economic Research, (December 2008)
Abstract
This paper uses three different surveys of economic forecasts to assess both the support for and the properties of informational rigidities faced by agents. Specifically, we track the impulse responses of mean forecast errors and disagreement among agents after exogenous structural shocks. Our key contribution is to document that in response to structural shocks, mean forecasts fail to completely adjust on impact, leading to statistically and economically significant deviations from the null of full information: the half life of forecast errors is roughly between 6 months and a year. Importantly, the dynamic process followed by forecast errors following structural shocks is consistent with the predictions of models of informational rigidities. We interpret this finding as providing support for the recent expansion of research into models of informational rigidities. In addition, we document several stylized facts about the conditional responses of forecast errors and disagreement among agents that can be used to differentiate between some of the models of informational rigidities recently proposed.
Description
What Can Survey Forecasts Tell Us About Informational Rigidities?
%0 Report
%1 NBERw14586
%A Coibion, Olivier
%A Gorodnichenko, Yuriy
%B Working Paper Series
%D 2008
%K expectations forecasts information information_rigidity macro
%N 14586
%T What Can Survey Forecasts Tell Us About Informational Rigidities?
%U http://www.nber.org/papers/w14586
%X This paper uses three different surveys of economic forecasts to assess both the support for and the properties of informational rigidities faced by agents. Specifically, we track the impulse responses of mean forecast errors and disagreement among agents after exogenous structural shocks. Our key contribution is to document that in response to structural shocks, mean forecasts fail to completely adjust on impact, leading to statistically and economically significant deviations from the null of full information: the half life of forecast errors is roughly between 6 months and a year. Importantly, the dynamic process followed by forecast errors following structural shocks is consistent with the predictions of models of informational rigidities. We interpret this finding as providing support for the recent expansion of research into models of informational rigidities. In addition, we document several stylized facts about the conditional responses of forecast errors and disagreement among agents that can be used to differentiate between some of the models of informational rigidities recently proposed.
@techreport{NBERw14586,
abstract = {This paper uses three different surveys of economic forecasts to assess both the support for and the properties of informational rigidities faced by agents. Specifically, we track the impulse responses of mean forecast errors and disagreement among agents after exogenous structural shocks. Our key contribution is to document that in response to structural shocks, mean forecasts fail to completely adjust on impact, leading to statistically and economically significant deviations from the null of full information: the half life of forecast errors is roughly between 6 months and a year. Importantly, the dynamic process followed by forecast errors following structural shocks is consistent with the predictions of models of informational rigidities. We interpret this finding as providing support for the recent expansion of research into models of informational rigidities. In addition, we document several stylized facts about the conditional responses of forecast errors and disagreement among agents that can be used to differentiate between some of the models of informational rigidities recently proposed.},
added-at = {2013-03-07T19:29:00.000+0100},
author = {Coibion, Olivier and Gorodnichenko, Yuriy},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/299bda12c86ad4cc28c05475e5df6c2b6/jp},
description = {What Can Survey Forecasts Tell Us About Informational Rigidities?},
institution = {National Bureau of Economic Research},
interhash = {b255c72bcbc0d51164dd3e87f9b1977b},
intrahash = {99bda12c86ad4cc28c05475e5df6c2b6},
keywords = {expectations forecasts information information_rigidity macro},
month = {December},
number = 14586,
series = {Working Paper Series},
timestamp = {2013-03-07T19:29:00.000+0100},
title = {What Can Survey Forecasts Tell Us About Informational Rigidities?},
type = {Working Paper},
url = {http://www.nber.org/papers/w14586},
year = 2008
}