Research / BFI Working PaperSep 10, 2019

IQ, Expectations, and Choice

Francesco D'Acunto, Daniel Hoang, Maritta Paloviita, Michael Weber

Forecast errors for inflation decline monotonically with both verbal and quantitative IQ in a large and representative male population. Within individuals, inflation expectations and perceptions are autocorrelated only for men above the median by IQ (high-IQ men). High-IQ men’s forecast revisions are consistent with the diagnostic-expectations framework, whereas anything goes for low-IQ men. Education levels, income, socioeconomic status, or financial constraints do not explain these results. Using ad-hoc tasks in a controlled environment, we investigate the channels behind these results. Low-IQ individuals’ knowledge of the concept of inflation is low; they associate inflation with concrete goods and services instead of abstract economic concepts, and are less capable of forecasting mean-reverting processes. Differences in expectations formation by IQ feed into choice—only high-IQ men plan to spend more when expecting higher inflation as the consumer Euler equation prescribes. Our results have implications for heterogeneous-beliefs models of consumption, saving, and investment.

More Research From These Scholars

BFI Working Paper Nov 1, 2016

Monetary Policy and the Stock Market: Time-Series Evidence

Michael Weber, Andreas Neuhierl
Topics:  Financial Markets, Technology & Innovation, Fiscal Studies
BFI Working Paper Dec 14, 2020

Cybersecurity Risk

Chris Florakis, Christodoulos Louca, Roni Michaely, Michael Weber
Topics:  Technology & Innovation
BFI Working Paper Jun 9, 2020

Does Policy Communication During COVID Work?

Olivier Coibion, Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Michael Weber
Topics:  COVID-19, Monetary Policy, Fiscal Studies