Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

Anchoring inflationary expectations

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Inflation expectations

Mains level: Paper 3- Understanding inflation anchoring

Context

The RBI released the Inflation Expectations Survey of Households (IESH) for March 2022 on April 8. The survey results present interesting behavioural insights for public policy, particularly from a gender perspective.

Significance of inflation expectations

  • The impact of inflation — the overall increase in the prices in an economy — is felt by everyone.
  • High inflation adversely affects the poor.
  • Individuals, therefore, form expectations about how prices will behave in the future to take precautions.
  • If they anticipate high inflation, they negotiate wages or rents to compensate against a potential fall in their purchasing power.
  • Self-fulfilling: Increased wages increase the cost of production, making expectations self-fulfilling and, therefore, playing a pivotal role in determining inflation.
  • Anchoring inflation expectations: Central banks raise interest rates to ‘anchor’ high inflationary expectations when temporary price shocks, on account of drought or disruption in global supply chains, entail the risk of getting transmitted into actual inflation.

What shapes inflation expectations of individuals?

  • A recent study carried out by Acunto et al., 2020, validates that what agents frequently purchase, instead of those purchased infrequently, shape their perception of the general level of inflation.
  • Factors shaping individual’s perception: A significant factor shaping perceptions on inflation are the prices that individuals observe in their daily lives, originally posited by Robert Lucas in his seminal Islands model.
  • Therefore, generalising aggregate inflation expectations for making general views of prices in the economy could be misleading.
  • This insight has implications for gender-based differences in anticipating inflation in the future.
  • Existing literature shows that women have higher inflationary expectations compared to men.
  •  However, a new study reveals that it is not the innate characteristics as much as the traditional gender roles that explain this divergence.

Natural experiments

  • To test its validity, trends of Inflation Expectations Survey of Households (IESH) before and after the lockdown period present itself as a crude ‘natural experiment’.
  • The authors hypothesise that if traditional gender roles are the primary reasons behind the gender inflation expectation gap, then the lockdown-imposed work-from-home (WFH) arrangements or loss of employment should contribute in closing this gap.
  • The logic: during the lockdown, people in urban areas lost jobs or remained at home, taking a relatively equal share in the frequent day-to-day purchases.
  • Two categories of occupations are studied here: homemakers (assumed to be dominated by women) and financial sector employees (assumed to be dominated by men).
  • Looking at the trends of the RBI surveys for the period between March 2018 and March 2020, homemakers report higher inflation expectations than financial sector employees.
  • However, this gap has narrowed over the last two years and has almost converged in March 2022.
  • A possible explanation of closing of the gap could be the gradual ‘experience effect’ of male-dominated financial sector employees.
  • Experience effect, contrary to Rational Expectations Theory that assumes individuals base their decisions on the information available to them, is based on the premise that actual personal experiences shape behaviour more than being informed about the outcome of the event.

Conclusion

Focus could be shifted more on the microfoundations — understanding macroeconomic outcomes by studying factors that shape individual behaviour and decision making — for making better policy decisions concerning macroeconomic phenomena.

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