Learning the optimal buffer-stock consumption rule of Carroll
Langue
EN
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Macroeconomic Dynamics. 2014, vol. 18, n° 4, p. 727-752
Résumé en anglais
This article questions the rather pessimistic conclusions of Allen and Carroll [Macroeconomic Dynamics 5 (2001), 255-271] about the ability of consumers to learn the optimal buffer-stock-based consumption rule. To this ...Lire la suite >
This article questions the rather pessimistic conclusions of Allen and Carroll [Macroeconomic Dynamics 5 (2001), 255-271] about the ability of consumers to learn the optimal buffer-stock-based consumption rule. To this end, we develop an agent-based model in which alternative learning schemes can be compared in terms of the consumption behavior that they yield. We show that neither purely adaptive learning nor social learning based on imitation can ensure satisfactory consumption behavior. In contrast, if the agents can form adaptive expectations, based on an evolving individual mental model, their behavior becomes much more interesting in terms of its regularity and its ability to improve performance (which is a clear manifestation of learning). Our results indicate that assumptions on bounded rationality and on adaptive expectations are perfectly compatible with sound and realistic economic behavior, which, in some cases, can even converge to the optimal solution. This framework may therefore be used to develop macroeconomic models with adaptive dynamics.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
Expectations
Adaptive Behavior
Computational Economics
Consumption Decisions
Learning
Unités de recherche