Book contents
- The Behavioral Economics of Inflation Expectations
- The Behavioral Economics of Inflation Expectations
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- 1 Patterns and Expectations
- 2 Extrapolation and Expectations
- 3 Eliciting Expectations under Laboratory Conditions
- 4 Features of the Laboratory Data
- 5 Similarity Matching and Scaling the Experimental Data
- 6 Pattern Extrapolation and Expectations Measured by Consumer Surveys
- 7 Heterogeneity and Uncertainty of Inflation Expectations
- 8 Inflation Dynamics
- 9 Explaining the Course of Interest Rates
- 10 Generalizing the Pattern-Based Approach
- 11 A Detour to Income Expectations
- 12 The Fisher Effect in Historical Times
- 13 Expectations of High Inflation
- 14 The Fisher Effect in Asian Economies
- 15 The Fisher Effect in African Economies
- 16 Estimates of Expected Inflation for Major Economies
- 17 Estimates of Expected Real Interest Rates for Major Economies
- Epilogue
- References
- Index
9 - Explaining the Course of Interest Rates
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 July 2020
- The Behavioral Economics of Inflation Expectations
- The Behavioral Economics of Inflation Expectations
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- 1 Patterns and Expectations
- 2 Extrapolation and Expectations
- 3 Eliciting Expectations under Laboratory Conditions
- 4 Features of the Laboratory Data
- 5 Similarity Matching and Scaling the Experimental Data
- 6 Pattern Extrapolation and Expectations Measured by Consumer Surveys
- 7 Heterogeneity and Uncertainty of Inflation Expectations
- 8 Inflation Dynamics
- 9 Explaining the Course of Interest Rates
- 10 Generalizing the Pattern-Based Approach
- 11 A Detour to Income Expectations
- 12 The Fisher Effect in Historical Times
- 13 Expectations of High Inflation
- 14 The Fisher Effect in Asian Economies
- 15 The Fisher Effect in African Economies
- 16 Estimates of Expected Inflation for Major Economies
- 17 Estimates of Expected Real Interest Rates for Major Economies
- Epilogue
- References
- Index
Summary
Here we investigate the validity of the relationship between expected inflation and nominal interest rates proposed by Fisher (1930). Irving Fisher suggested that the nominal interest rate moves one-to-one with expected inflation. This means that an increase in expected inflation by one percentage point should increase the nominal interest rate by one percentage point. The basic intuition is that lenders (e.g., buyers of bonds) demand compensation from borrowers for the loss of purchasing power resulting from inflation.
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- Information
- The Behavioral Economics of Inflation ExpectationsMacroeconomics Meets Psychology, pp. 94 - 109Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020