EU Consumer Confidence and the New Modesty Hypothesis (CROSBI ID 282003)
Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Sorić, Petar ; Čižmešija, Mirjana ; Matošec, Marina
engleski
EU Consumer Confidence and the New Modesty Hypothesis
Voices have been raised that the link between economic sentiment and hard macroeconomic data has considerably weakened over time, bringing agents’ macroeconomic assessments of normal growth to a more modest, new normal level. We empirically test this hypothesis by linking consumer confidence to consumption growth for all individual EU member states, as well as for the EU and the euro area. Applying a battery of nonlinear econometric techniques, we find that normal consumption growth rates (as assessed by consumers) have recorded a long-term decline in about half of countries (dominantly old EU member states), while all other economies either contradict such a hypothesis or exhibit intermittent intervals of increasing and decreasing normal growth. Our calculations reveal that normal consumption growth rates are highly positively related to macroeconomic volatility, reflecting the postulates of psychophysics. In that sense, the new modesty hypothesis can to some extent be attributed to the Great Moderation era, which has diminished consumers’ perceptive reactions to macroeconomic stimuli.
Consumer surveys ; Time-varying parameter model ; Structural break ; Great Moderation
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Podaci o izdanju
152 (3)
2020.
899-921
objavljeno
0303-8300
1573-0921
10.1007/s11205-020-02449-x