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Abstract
Currency unions are often modeled as homogeneous economies, although they are fundamentally different. The expectations that impact macroeconomic behavior in any given country are not the expectations of variables at the currency-union level but at the country level. We model these expectations with a behavioral reinforcement learning model. In our model, economic integration is of particular importance in determining whether economic behavior in a currency union is stable. Monetary policy alone is insufficient to guarantee stable economic behavior, as the central bank cannot conduct different monetary policies in different countries. These results are easily overlooked when modeling expectations as rational.
JEL Codes: E03, F45, E52, D84.
The views expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the Bank of Lithuania.
The behavioral economics of currency unions: Economic integration and monetary policy
Monetary policy under behavioral expectations: Theory and experiment
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Abstract
Expectations play a crucial role in modern macroeconomic models. We consider a New Keynesian framework under rational expectations and under a behavioral model of expectation formation. We show how the economy behaves in the alternative scenarios with a focus on inflation volatility. Contrary to the rational model, the behavioral model predicts that inflation volatility can be lowered if the central bank reacts to the output gap in addition to inflation. We test the opposing theoretical predictions in a learning-to-forecast experiment. The results support the behavioral model and the claim that output stabilization can lead to less volatile inflation.
JEL Codes: C90, E03, E52, D84.
The views expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent those of the Bank of Lithuania.