CONVERGENCE IN MONETARY INFLATION MODELS WITH HETEROGENEOUS LEARNING RULES

From MaRDI portal
Publication:2739285

DOI10.1017/S1365100501018016zbMath1017.91065OpenAlexW1992372601MaRDI QIDQ2739285

Ramon Marimon, Seppo Honkapohja, George W. Evans

Publication date: 3 September 2003

Published in: Macroeconomic Dynamics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/s1365100501018016



Related Items

Financial frictions, the housing market, and unemployment, Learning about monetary policy rules when the housing market matters, A classification system for economic stochastic control models, Learning in linear models with expectational leads, Adaptive learning and monetary exchange, Existence of adaptively stable sunspot equilibria near an indeterminate steady state., Popularity of reinforcement-based and belief-based learning models: an evolutionary approach, Optimal forecasts in the presence of structural breaks, Expectations and optimal monetary policy: a stability problem revisited, Monetary policy rules in a non-rational world: a macroeconomic experiment, Expectational diversity in monetary economies, Determinacy and e-stability under reduced-form learning, Adaptive expectations coordination in an economy with heterogeneous agents, Performance of monetary policy with internal central bank forecasting, Eductive expectations coordination on deterministic cycles in an economy with heterogeneous agents, Policy change and learning in the RBC model, Stability properties for learning with heterogeneous expectations and multiple equilibria, Monetary policy, indeterminacy and learning, Adaptive learning, endogenous uncertainty, and asymmetric dynamics, Experimental evidence on inflation expectation formation, Are hyperinflation paths learnable?, Intrinsic heterogeneity in expectation formation, Learning to believe in secular stagnation, Are sunspots learnable? An experimental investigation in a simple macroeconomic model, A note on some properties of the ESTAR model, Saddlepath learning, MSV learning and consistency of subjective expectations