Working Paper

Optimally Imprecise Memory and Biased Forecasts

Rava Azeredo da Silveira, Yeji Sung, Michael Woodford
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8709

We propose a model of optimal decision making subject to a memory constraint. The constraint is a limit on the complexity of memory measured using Shannon’s mutual information, as in models of rational inattention; but our theory differs from that of Sims (2003) in not assuming costless memory of past cognitive states. We show that the model implies that both forecasts and actions will exhibit idiosyncratic random variation; that average beliefs will also differ from rational-expectations beliefs, with a bias that fluctuates forever with a variance that does not fall to zero even in the long run; and that more recent news will be given disproportionate weight in forecasts. We solve the model under a variety of assumptions about the degree of persistence of the variable to be forecasted and the horizon over which it must be forecasted, and examine how the nature of forecast biases depends on these parameters. The model provides a simple explanation for a number of features of reported expectations in laboratory and field settings, notably the evidence of over-reaction in elicited forecasts documented by Afrouzi et al. (2020) and Bordalo et al. (2020a).

CESifo Category
Monetary Policy and International Finance
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: rational inattention, over-reaction, survey expectations
JEL Classification: D840, E030, G410