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Adaptive expectations



 
 
In economics
Economics

File:Ballard Farmers' Market - vegetables.jpgEconomics is the Social sciences that studies the Production theory basics, Distribution , and Consumption of Good and Service ....
, adaptive expectations means that people form their expectations about what will happen in the future based on what has happened in the past. For example, if inflation has been higher than expected in the past, people would revise expectations for the future.

One simple version of adaptive expectations is stated in the following equation, where is the next year's rate of inflation that is currently expected; is this year's rate of inflation that was expected last year; and is this year's actual rate of inflation:



With is between 0 and 1, this says that current expectations of future inflation reflect past expectations and an "error-adjustment" term, in which current expectations are raised (or lowered) according to the gap between actual inflation and previous expectations.






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In economics
Economics

File:Ballard Farmers' Market - vegetables.jpgEconomics is the Social sciences that studies the Production theory basics, Distribution , and Consumption of Good and Service ....
, adaptive expectations means that people form their expectations about what will happen in the future based on what has happened in the past. For example, if inflation has been higher than expected in the past, people would revise expectations for the future.

One simple version of adaptive expectations is stated in the following equation, where is the next year's rate of inflation that is currently expected; is this year's rate of inflation that was expected last year; and is this year's actual rate of inflation:



With is between 0 and 1, this says that current expectations of future inflation reflect past expectations and an "error-adjustment" term, in which current expectations are raised (or lowered) according to the gap between actual inflation and previous expectations. This error-adjustment is also called "partial adjustment."

The theory of adaptive expectations can be applied to all previous periods so that current inflationary expectations equal:



where equals actual inflation years in the past. Thus, current expected inflation reflects a weighted average of all past inflation, where the weights get smaller and smaller as we move further in the past.

Once a forecasting error is made by agents, due to a stochastic shock, they will be unable to correctly forecast the price level again even if the price level experiences no further shocks since they only ever incorporate part of their errors. The backward nature of expectation formulation and the resultant systematic errors made by agents (see Cobweb model
Cobweb model

The cobweb model or cobweb theory is an economic model that explains why prices might be subject to periodic fluctuations in certain types of markets....
) was unsatisfactory to economists such as John Muth
John Muth

John Fraser Muth was an American economist. He is known as "the father of the rational expectations revolution in economics", primarily due to his article "Rational Expectations and the Theory of Price Movements" from 1961....
, who was pivotal in the development of an alternative model of how expectations are formed, called rational expectations
Rational expectations

Rational expectations is an assumption used in many contemporary Model , and also in other areas of contemporary economics and game theory and in other applications of rational choice theory....
. This has largely replaced adaptive expectations in macroeconomic theory since its assumption of rationality is more consistent with wider economic theory, although not necessarily consistent with economic reality.

See also

  • Rational Expectations
    Rational expectations

    Rational expectations is an assumption used in many contemporary Model , and also in other areas of contemporary economics and game theory and in other applications of rational choice theory....
  • Policy Ineffectiveness Proposition
    Policy Ineffectiveness Proposition

    The Policy Ineffectiveness Proposition is a new classical theory proposed in 1976 by Thomas J. Sargent and Neil Wallace based upon the theory of rational expectations....
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
    Self-fulfilling prophecy

    A self-fulfilling prophecy is a prediction that directly or indirectly causes itself to become true, by the very terms of the prophecy itself. Although examples of such prophecy can be found in literature as far back as ancient Greece and ancient India, it is 20th-century sociologist Robert K....
  • Problem of induction
    Problem of induction

    The problem of induction is the philosophy question of whether inductive reasoning leads to truth. That is, what is the justification for either:...