Behavioral Theories of the Business Cycle

Working Paper: NBER ID: w12570

Authors: Nir Jaimovich; Sergio Rebelo

Abstract: We explore the business cycle implications of expectation shocks and of two well-known psychological biases, optimism and overconfidence. The expectations of optimistic agents are biased toward good outcomes, while overconfident agents overestimate the precision of the signals that they receive. Both expectation shocks and overconfidence can increase business-cycle volatility, while preserving the model's properties in terms of comovement, and relative volatilities. In contrast, optimism is not a useful source of volatility in our model.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: E32


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
overconfidence (G41)business cycle volatility (E32)
overconfidence (G41)overinvestment in booms (E22)
overconfidence (G41)underinvestment in recessions (E22)
overinvestment in booms (E22)business cycle volatility (E32)
underinvestment in recessions (E22)business cycle volatility (E32)
expectation shocks (D84)business cycle volatility (E32)
optimism (D84)steady-state levels of capital (E22)
optimism (D84)steady-state levels of output (E23)
optimism (D84)overinvestment (G31)
investment-specific technical change (O33)business cycle volatility (E32)
deviations from rationality (D01)overconfidence (G41)

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