
Imperfect Knowledge Economics
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Frydman and Goldberg offer a long-overdue response to the shortcomings of conventional economic models. Drawing attention to the inherent limits of economists' knowledge, they introduce a new approach to economic analysis: Imperfect Knowledge Economics (IKE). IKE rejects exact quantitative predictions of individual decisions and market outcomes in favor of mathematical models that generate only qualitative predictions of economic change. Using the foreign exchange market as a testing ground for IKE, this book sheds new light on exchange-rate and risk-premium movements, which have confounded conventional models for decades.
Offering a fresh way to think about markets and representing a potential turning point in economics, Imperfect Knowledge Economics will be essential reading for economists, policymakers, and professional investors.
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Content
- Cover
- Half-title
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Part I: From Early Modern Economics to Imperfect Knowledge Economics
- 1. Recognizing the Limits of Economists' Knowledge
- The Overreach of Contemporary Economics
- The Aim of This Book
- Contemporary Models in a World of Imperfect Knowledge
- The Non-Fully Intelligible Individual
- IKE Models
- IKE of Exchange Rates and Risk
- Imperfect Knowledge and Policy Analysis
- From Contemporary Economics to Imperfect Knowledge Economics
- 2. A Tradition Interrupted
- The Stranglehold of the Contemporary Approach
- The Non-Fully Intelligible Individual in Early Modern Economics
- Jettisoning Insights from Early Modern Analysis
- 3. Flawed Foundations: The Gross Irrationality of "Rational Expectations" and Behavioral Models
- Conventional and Behavioral Representations of Preferences with Uncertain Outcomes
- Self-Interest, Social Context, and Individual Decisions
- Individual Behavior and Aggregate Outcomes
- From Early Modern to Phelps's Microfoundations
- "Rational Expectations": Abandoning the Modern Research Program
- Diversity of Forecasting Strategies: The Gross Irrationality of "Rational Expectations"
- Inconsistency in Behavioral Models
- 4. Reconsidering Modern Economics
- Sharp Predictions and Fully Predetermined Representations
- Qualitative Predictions of Change in Fully Predetermined Models
- IKE Models of Change
- IKE Causal-Transition Paths
- Appendix 4.A: Fully Prespecifying Change in the Social Context
- Appendix 4.B: Modeling Change in Outcomes with Fully Predetermined Probabilistic Rules
- 5. Imperfect Knowledge Economics of Supply and Demand
- Fully Predetermined Representations of Supply and Demand
- Supply and Demand Analysis in Contemporary Models
- History as the Future and Vice Versa
- Supply and Demand Analysis in IKE Models
- Irreversibility of History in IKE Models
- Part II: "Anomalies" in Contemporary Models of Currency Markets
- 6. The Overreach of Contemporary Models of Asset Markets
- Describing Forecasting Behavior
- Fully Predetermined Representations of Forecasting Strategies and Their Revisions
- Modeling Economic Change with a Time-Invariant Structure
- Models with Fully Predetermined Changes in Structure
- Prespecifying Collective Beliefs in Currency Markets: Bubble Models
- Appendix 6.A: A Conventional Macroeconomic Model
- 7. The "Puzzling" Behavior of Exchange Rates: Lost Fundamentals and Long Swings
- Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Fundamentals: The Futile Search for a Fully Predetermined Relationship
- The Exchange Rate Disconnect Puzzle: An Artifact of the Contemporary Approach
- Macroeconomic Fundamentals over Long Horizons: Self-Limiting Long Swings
- Can REH Models Explain Long Swings in Exchange Rates?
- REH Bubble Models and the Pattern of Long Swings in Real World Markets
- Lost Fundamentals and Forsaken Rationality: Behavioral Models
- 8. "Anomalous" Returns on Foreign Exchange: Is It Really Irrationality?
- The Record on Foreign Exchange Returns
- An REH Risk Premium?
- Is Irrationality the Answer?
- The Forward-Discount "Anomaly": Another Artifact of the Contemporary Approach
- Part III: Imperfect Knowledge Economics of Exchange Rates and Risk
- 9. Modeling Preferences in Asset Markets: Experimental Evidence and Imperfect Knowledge
- Prospect Theory and Speculative Decisions
- Endogenous Loss Aversion and Limits to Speculation
- Experimental Evidence and Behavioral Finance Models
- Moving beyond Behavioral Finance Models
- IKE Representations of Preferences in Asset Markets: Individual Uncertainty Premiums
- Imperfect Knowledge and Preferences over Gambles: Endogenous Prospect Theory
- Appendix 9.A: Limits to Speculation under Endogenous Loss Aversion
- 10. Modeling Individual Forecasting Strategies and Their Revisions
- Theories Consistent Expectations Hypothesis
- IKE Representations of Revisions: An Overview
- Trend Restriction
- Conservative Revisions
- Revisions of the Expected Unit Loss
- 11. Bulls and Bears in Equilibrium: Uncertainty-Adjusted Uncovered Interest Parity
- Momentary Equilibrium in the Foreign Exchange Market
- Equilibrium under Risk Aversion
- Uncertainty-Adjusted UIP
- 12. IKE of the Premium on Foreign Exchange: Theory and Evidence
- An IKE House Money Model: Time-Varying Preferences
- An IKE Gap Plus Model: Autonomous Revisions in Forecasting Strategies
- Confronting the Gap Plus and House Money Models with Time-Series Data
- The Gap Plus Model and the Frequency of Sign Reversals
- Avoiding the Presumption of Gross Irrationality
- Appendix 12.A
- 13. The Forward Discount "Anomaly": The Peril of Fully Prespecifying Market Efficiency
- Bilson-Fama Regression and the Forward Discount "Anomaly"
- Structural Instability of the BF Regression and the Gap Plus Model
- BF Regression and Market Efficiency
- 14. Imperfect Knowledge and Long Swings in the Exchange Rate
- A Monetary Model
- Invariant Representations and an Unbounded Swing Away from PPP
- Fixed Policy Rules and Invariant Representations?
- An IKE Model of Exchange Rate Swings
- Conventional and Behavioral Views of Reversals
- Imperfect Knowledge and Self-Limiting Long Swings
- Appendix 14.A: Solution with an Invariant Representation
- Appendix 14.B: Exchange Rate Swings and Sticky Goods Prices
- 15. Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Fundamentals: Abandoning the Search for a Fully Predetermined Relationship
- Structural Change in the Causal Mechanism
- Macroeconomic Fundamentals and the Exchange Rate in the 1970s
- Are the Monetary Models Consistent with Empirical Evidence?
- Macroeconomic Fundamentals and the Exchange Rate in the 1980s
- Appendix 15.A: Description of Data
- References
- Index
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