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Ouvrages Année : 2000

Price expectations in goods and financial markets

Résumé

Four main lessons stem from the works presented in this volume. First, the rational expectation hypothesis has to go thoroughly into more general concepts. If the REH in a muthian sense seems now invalidated, this result does not mean that there is not rationality in price expectations : in the one hand, expectations may be economically rational in the sense of the advantage-cost analysis, and, in the other hand, the exchange of informations between agents through the market may involve some other types of rationalities. Secondly, it appears important to respect the individual nature of expectations both at the theoretical and empirical levels : generally, the heterogeneity is not neutral either for reaching an economic equilibrium or for econometrical estimations of expectational processes. Thirdly, expectational behaviors change over time ; both the processes and the parameters which intervene in these processes are changing. Fourthly, while expectational processes are rather extrapolative (destabilizing) when the horizon is short (less or equal to one month), they are rather regressive (stabilizing) when the horizon is long (greater than one month).
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Dates et versions

halshs-00172996 , version 1 (18-09-2007)

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  • HAL Id : halshs-00172996 , version 1

Citer

Georges Prat, François Gardes. Price expectations in goods and financial markets: new developments in theory and empirical research. François Gardes et Georges Prat. Edward Elgar, pp.302, 2000. ⟨halshs-00172996⟩
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