Home

expectationsaugmented

Expectationsaugmented refers to a class of economic models that explicitly incorporate agents’ expectations into the determination of current and future outcomes. In these models, decisions by households, firms, and policymakers respond not only to present conditions but also to what people expect will occur in the future.

A well-known instance is the expectationsaugmented Phillips curve, which links inflation to expected inflation and to

Origins and scope: The approach emerged in mid-20th century macroeconomics, with Milton Friedman and later scholars

Implications and limitations: By making expectations a central determinant, expectationsaugmented models emphasize the importance of credibility

See also: Phillips curve, rational expectations, adaptive expectations, monetary policy credibility, macroeconomic models.

real
activity.
In
a
simplified
form,
inflation
in
period
t
is
modeled
as
the
sum
of
expected
inflation
and
a
term
reflecting
the
output
gap
plus
any
supply
shocks.
This
approach
helps
explain
why
the
traditional
short-run
trade-off
between
inflation
and
unemployment
can
weaken
once
expectations
adjust,
and
why
the
long-run
relationship
may
be
different
from
the
short-run
one.
arguing
that
anticipated
policy
actions
influence
inflation
but
do
not
permanently
cure
unemployment.
The
framework
allows
different
expectations
formation
mechanisms—notably
adaptive
and
rational
expectations—to
be
embedded
within
models,
affecting
both
results
and
policy
implications.
and
forward
guidance
for
policy.
They
also
face
empirical
challenges,
since
expectations
are
not
directly
observed
and
must
be
inferred
or
specified
within
a
given
modeling
approach;
results
can
therefore
depend
on
the
chosen
mechanism
for
forming
expectations.