Working paper/research report

Household expectations and dissent among policymakers


Authors listGrebe, Moritz; Tillmann, P

Publication year2022

URLhttps://hdl.handle.net/10419/261485

Title of seriesIMFS Working Paper Series

Number in series169


Abstract

The authors study the impact of dissent in the ECB‘s Governing Council on uncertainty surrounding households‘ inflation expectations. They conduct a randomized controlled trial using the Bundesbank Online Panel Households. Participants are provided with alternative information treatments concerning the vote in the Council, e.g. unanimity and dissent, and are asked to submit probabilistic inflation expectations. The results show that the vote is informative. Households revise their subjective inflation forecast after receiving information about the vote. Dissenting votes cause a wider individual distribution of future inflation. Hence, dissent increases households‘ uncertainty about inflation. This effect is statistically significant once the authors allow for the interaction between the treatments and individual characteristics of respondents. The results are robust with respect to alternative measures of forecast uncertainty and hold for different model specifications. The findings suggest that providing information about dissenting votes without additional information about the nature of dissent is detrimental to coordinating household expectations.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGrebe, M. and Tillmann, P. (2022) Household expectations and dissent among policymakers. (IMFS Working Paper Series, 169). Frankfurt am Main: Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/261485

APA Citation styleGrebe, M., & Tillmann, P. (2022). Household expectations and dissent among policymakers. (IMFS Working Paper Series, 169). Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/261485


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 17:02