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Anchoring of inflation expectations is of paramount importance for central banks’ ability to deliver stable inflation and minimize price dispersion. Relying on daily interest rates and inflation forecasts from major financial institutions in the United States, we calculate monetary policy surprises of individual analysts as the unexpected changes in the federal funds rate before the meetings of the Federal Reserve Board. We then assess the effect of monetary policy surprises on the dispersion of inflation expectations, a proxy for the extent of anchoring, which is based on the same analysts’ inflation projections submit-ted after the Fed meetings. With an identification strategy that hinges on a tight window around the Fed meetings, we find that monetary policy surprises lead to an increase in the dispersion of inflation expectations up to nine months after the policy meeting. We rationalize these results with a partial equilibrium model that features rational expectations and sticky information. When we allow the degree of information rigidity to depend on the realization of firm-specific shocks, the theoretical results are qualitatively consistent and quantitatively close to the empirical evidence.
Business and Economics --- Banks and Banking --- Inflation --- Investments: Futures --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Forecasting --- Expectations --- Speculations --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Monetary Policy --- Forecasting and Other Model Applications --- Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects --- Pension Funds --- Non-bank Financial Institutions --- Financial Instruments --- Institutional Investors --- Macroeconomics --- Economic Forecasting --- Monetary economics --- Banking --- Finance --- Economic forecasting --- Inflation targeting --- Central bank policy rate --- Futures --- Prices --- Monetary policy --- Financial services --- Financial institutions --- Interest rates --- Derivative securities --- United States
Choose an application
Anchoring of inflation expectations is of paramount importance for central banks’ ability to deliver stable inflation and minimize price dispersion. Relying on daily interest rates and inflation forecasts from major financial institutions in the United States, we calculate monetary policy surprises of individual analysts as the unexpected changes in the federal funds rate before the meetings of the Federal Reserve Board. We then assess the effect of monetary policy surprises on the dispersion of inflation expectations, a proxy for the extent of anchoring, which is based on the same analysts’ inflation projections submit-ted after the Fed meetings. With an identification strategy that hinges on a tight window around the Fed meetings, we find that monetary policy surprises lead to an increase in the dispersion of inflation expectations up to nine months after the policy meeting. We rationalize these results with a partial equilibrium model that features rational expectations and sticky information. When we allow the degree of information rigidity to depend on the realization of firm-specific shocks, the theoretical results are qualitatively consistent and quantitatively close to the empirical evidence.
United States --- Business and Economics --- Banks and Banking --- Inflation --- Investments: Futures --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Forecasting --- Expectations --- Speculations --- Price Level --- Deflation --- Monetary Policy --- Forecasting and Other Model Applications --- Interest Rates: Determination, Term Structure, and Effects --- Pension Funds --- Non-bank Financial Institutions --- Financial Instruments --- Institutional Investors --- Macroeconomics --- Economic Forecasting --- Monetary economics --- Banking --- Finance --- Economic forecasting --- Inflation targeting --- Central bank policy rate --- Futures --- Prices --- Monetary policy --- Financial services --- Financial institutions --- Interest rates --- Derivative securities
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