Optimal Expectations
Top Cited Papers
- 1 August 2005
- journal article
- Published by American Economic Association in American Economic Review
- Vol. 95 (4) , 1092-1118
- https://doi.org/10.1257/0002828054825493
Abstract
Forward-looking agents care about expected future utility flows, and hence have higher current felicity if they are optimistic. This paper studies utility-based biases in beliefs by supposing that beliefs maximize average felicity, optimally balancing this benefit of optimism against the costs of worse decision making. A small optimistic bias in beliefs typically leads to first-order gains in anticipatory utility and only second-order costs in realized outcomes. In a portfolio choice example, investors overestimate their return and exhibit a preference for skewness; in general equilibrium, investors' prior beliefs are endogenously heterogeneous. In a consumption-saving example, consumers are both overconfident and overoptimistic.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Memory and AnticipationThe Economic Journal, 2005
- A Memory-Based Model of Bounded RationalityThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2002
- Forecasting crashes: trading volume, past returns, and conditional skewness in stock pricesJournal of Financial Economics, 2001
- First Impressions Matter: A Model of Confirmatory BiasThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1999
- Preference Parameters and Behavioral Heterogeneity: An Experimental Approach in the Health and Retirement StudyThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1997
- Back to Bentham? Explorations of Experienced UtilityThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1997
- The Long‐Run Performance of initial Public OfferingsThe Journal of Finance, 1991
- Unrealistic optimism about future life events.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1980
- Agreeing to DisagreeThe Annals of Statistics, 1976
- Optimal Properties of Exponentially Weighted ForecastsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1960