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Price Expectations in Goods and Financial Markets - New Developments in Theory and Empirical Research (Hardcover)
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Price Expectations in Goods and Financial Markets - New Developments in Theory and Empirical Research (Hardcover)
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Analysing how price expectations are formed is essential since the
dynamics of market prices are mainly driven by the agent's belief
concerning the future values of prices and by the uncertainty
characterising these values. This is a difficult task as prices are
highly volatile in most markets and expectational behaviour is
heterogeneous and unstable. This volume discusses the concept of
rationality of expectations from both a theoretical and an
empirical point of view, and on individual and collective levels.
Concerning the first aspect, the book focuses on how agents collect
and process information and how market opinion is formed.
Concerning the second aspect, the book presents studies based on
individual price expectations and on the 'consensus' revealed by
survey data. To appreciate the degree of generality of
expectational behaviour, the contributors analyse price
expectations in a variety of markets, periods and countries. Great
attention is paid to financial markets which have represented the
main field of analysis of expectations over the last ten years.
Four main lessons stem from the works presented in this book.
First, if the REH in the muthian sense seems now invalidated, this
result does not mean that there is not rationality in price
expectations: on the one hand, expectations may be economically
rational in the sense of the advantage-cost analysis, and, on the
other hand, the exchange of information between agents through the
market may involve some mimetic rationalities. Second, it appears
important to take into account the individual nature of
expectations both at the theoretical and empirical levels:
generally, the heterogeneity is not neutral in reaching an economic
equilibrium or in estimating expectational processes. Third,
expectational behaviour change over time: both the processes and
the parameters which intervene in these processes are time-varying,
especially according to the volatility of the variables. Fourth, a
combination of these three basic processes appears to be successful
in explaining the dynamics of expectations, although the
expectational process is rather extrapolative (destabilising) when
the horizon is short and rather regressive and adaptive
(stabilising) when the horizon is long.
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