How Does Consumption Respond to News about Inflation? Field Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial

Author:

Coibion Olivier1,Georgarakos Dimitris2,Gorodnichenko Yuriy3,van Rooij Maarten4

Affiliation:

1. University of Texas at Austin and NBER (email: )

2. European Central Bank (email: )

3. University of California at Berkeley and NBER (email: )

4. De Nederlandsche Bank (email: )

Abstract

We implement a survey of Dutch households in which random subsets of respondents receive information about inflation. The resulting exogenously generated variation in inflation expectations is used to assess how expectations affect consumption decisions. The causal effects of reduced inflation expectations on nondurable spending are imprecisely estimated, but there is a sharp positive effect on durable spending. This is likely driven by the fact that Dutch households seem to become more optimistic about their real income and aggregate spending when they decrease their inflation expectations. We find little role for cognitive or financial constraints in explaining spending responses. (JEL C83, D12, D83, D84, E21, E31)

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

General Economics, Econometrics and Finance

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