2015
DOI: 10.17016/feds.2015.035
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Are Survey Expectations Theory-Consistent? The Role of Central Bank Communication and News

Abstract: In this paper we analyze whether central bank communication can facilitate the understanding of key economic concepts. Using survey data for consumers and professionals, we calculate how many of them have expectations consistent with the Fisher Equation, the Taylor rule and the Phillips curve and test, by accounting for three different communication channels, whether central banks can influence those. A substantial share of participants has expectations consistent with the Fisher equation, followed by the Tayl… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The present value model introduced in Section 3 implies that a high dividend-price ratio today forecasts higher excess returns in the future. 27 This is consistent with our finding of a negative effect of the dividend-price ratio on future stock volatility. In contrast, a high price-earnings ratio predicts increasing stock volatility.…”
Section: Controlling For Other Predictorssupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The present value model introduced in Section 3 implies that a high dividend-price ratio today forecasts higher excess returns in the future. 27 This is consistent with our finding of a negative effect of the dividend-price ratio on future stock volatility. In contrast, a high price-earnings ratio predicts increasing stock volatility.…”
Section: Controlling For Other Predictorssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The relation between stock volatility and inflation is also likely to depend on the market participants' beliefs about the central bank's reaction function. If the central bank follows an inflation objective, then higher inflation expectations should be accompanied by the expectation of higher policy rates in the future (see Engel and West, 2006, Conrad and Lamla, 2010, and Dräger et al, 2016, for theoretical and empirical evidence). In response, the stock market might decline and higher inflation expectations can be associated with higher volatility.…”
Section: The Economics Of Volatilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using the Michigan survey data on inflation expectations, Lanne et al (2009) showed that households use past releases of actual inflation (rather than forward-looking forecasts) to form their inflation expectations. Dräger et al (2016) focused on consumers and professional forecasters and analysed the extent to which their expectations are in line with the Fisher equation, the Phillips curve, and the Taylor rule. Fendel et al (2010) showed that professional forecasters use the expectations-augmented Phillips curve model when they forecast macroeconomic variables.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We study how lagged inflation and output gaps affect inflation forecasts to evaluate whether the usual determinants of inflation are used by the different considered categories of agents. The formation processes of expectations and the variables entering this process have been notably studied by Mankiw and Reis (2002), Sims (2003), Lanne, Luoma and Luoto (2009), Pfajfar and Santoro (2010), Fendel, Lis and Rülke (2011), and Dräger, Lamla and Pfajfar (2016). We follow their methodology.…”
Section:  Evaluating the Usual Determinants Of Inflation Forecastsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… For a discussion on the selection of the sample using the Michigan Survey of Consumers (MSC) see Carvalho and Nechio () and Dräger, et al . (). We check for robustness of our results with respect to the sample period and present estimations for our main results with the full sample period in section ‘Robustness checks’. …”
mentioning
confidence: 97%