Rational expectations and the paradox of policy-relevant natural experiments
Journal
Journal of Monetary Economics
Subject
Finance
Publishing details
Authors / Editors
Chemla G;Hennessy C
Biographies
Publication Year
2020
Abstract
Policy experiments using large microeconomic datasets have recently gained ground in macroeconomics. Imposing rational expectations, we examine robustness of evidence derived from ideal natural experiments applied to atomistic agents in dynamic settings. Paradoxically, once experimental evidence is viewed as sufficiently clean to use, it then becomes contaminated by ex post endogeneity: Measured responses depend upon priors and the objective function into which evidence is fed. Moreover, agents’ policy beliefs become endogenously correlated with their causal parameters, severely clouding inference, e.g. sign reversals and non-invertibility may obtain. Treatment-control differences are contaminated for non-quadratic adjustment costs. Constructively, we illustrate how inference can be corrected accounting for feedback and highlight factors mitigating contamination.
Keywords
Natural experiments; Rational expectations; Causality; Policy
Available on ECCH
No