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January 9, 2015

Gauging Inflation Expectations with Surveys, Part 3: Do Firms Know What They Don’t Know?

In the previous two macroblog posts, we introduced you to the inflation expectations of firms and argued that the question you ask
matters a lot. In this week's final post, we examine another important dimension of our data: inflation uncertainty, a topic of some
deliberation at the last Federal Open Market Committee meeting (according to the recently released minutes).
Survey data typically measure only the inflation expectation of a respondent, not the certainty surrounding that prediction. As a
result, survey-based measures often use the disagreement among respondents as a proxy for uncertainty, but as Rob Rich, Joe
Tracy, and Matt Ploenzke at the New York Fed caution in this recent blog post, you probably shouldn't do this.
Because we derive business inflation expectations from the probabilities that each firm assigns to various unit cost outcomes, we
can measure the inflation uncertainty of a respondent directly. And that allows us to investigate whether uncertainty plays a role in
the accuracy of firm inflation predictions. We wanted to know: Do firms know what they don't know?
The following table, adapted from our recent working paper, reports the accuracy of a business inflation forecast relative to the firm's
inflation uncertainty at the time the forecast was made. We first compare the prediction accuracy of firms who have a larger-thanaverage degree of prediction uncertainty against those with less-than-average uncertainty. We also compare the most uncertain
firms with the least uncertain firms.

(enlarge)
On average, firms provide relatively accurate, unbiased assessments of their future unit cost changes. But the results also clearly
support the conclusion that more uncertain respondents tend to be significantly less accurate inflation forecasters.
Maybe this result doesn't strike you as mind-blowing. Wouldn't you expect firms with the greatest inflation uncertainty to make the
least accurate inflation predictions? We would, too. But isn't it refreshing to know that business decision-makers know when they are
making decisions under uncertainty? And we also think that monitoring how certain respondents are about their inflation expectation,
in addition to whether the average expectation for the group has changed, should prove useful when evaluating how well inflation
expectations are anchored. If you think so too, you can monitor both on our website's Inflation Project page.
By Mike Bryan, vice president and senior economist,

Brent Meyer, economist, and

Nicholas Parker, economic policy specialist, all in the Atlanta Fed's research department

January 9, 2015 in Business Inflation Expectations, Forecasts, Inflation, Inflation Expectations | Permalink

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