How do households, firms, and investors form expectations about inflation, growth, and monetary policy? Why do central bank announcements sometimes trigger large movements in financial markets - and other times barely register? And how do beliefs, attention, and uncertainty shape the transmission of macroeconomic policy?
Addressing these questions, this course introduces students to recent advances in behavioral macroeconomics, with a central focus on expectation formation and its causal impact on economic behaviour. We study how macroeconomic beliefs are formed, updated, and distorted - and why these processes matter critically for central bank policy, financial markets, and aggregate outcomes.
Topics include:
- Macroeconomic expectations: measurement and empirical methods using surveys and experiments
- Central bank policy, communication and forecasting practices in financial institutions
- Subjective models of the macroeconomy and models with incomplete information
The course content and associated assessments are designed to help students develop research ideas and empirical skills, and may serve as a foundation for identifying topics that could potentially be extended into a Master's thesis.