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Measuring inflation expectations: How stable are density forecasts?

Last registered on January 03, 2023

Pre-Trial

Trial Information

General Information

Title
Measuring inflation expectations: How stable are density forecasts?
RCT ID
AEARCTR-0010633
Initial registration date
December 13, 2022

Initial registration date is when the trial was registered.

It corresponds to when the registration was submitted to the Registry to be reviewed for publication.

First published
January 03, 2023, 4:02 PM EST

First published corresponds to when the trial was first made public on the Registry after being reviewed.

Locations

Region
Region

Primary Investigator

Affiliation
Heidelberg University

Other Primary Investigator(s)

PI Affiliation
Mannheim University
PI Affiliation
Heidelberg University

Additional Trial Information

Status
Completed
Start date
2022-12-16
End date
2022-12-23
Secondary IDs
Prior work
This trial is based on or builds upon one or more prior RCTs.
Abstract
Central banks regularly measure inflation expectations using density forecasts, in which respondents are asked to assign probabilities to pre-specified ranges of inflation. We test how stable these forecasts are if we introduce systematic changes to the scale used, such as shifting the whole scale or varying the number of bins. This experiment is a follow-up to an experiment conducted in December 2021 (see https://www.socialscienceregistry.org/trials/8716).

Participants are asked three questions on their inflation expectations taken from the New York Fed’s SCE (including the density forecast). After each of these questions, participants state their certainty about their answer on a 6-point Likert scale. Afterwards, participants fill out a short demographic survey, containing questions on age, gender, US state of residence, education, political orientation, knowledge of the Fed inflation target, financial literacy and an attention check. Participants have the option to not answer these questions, if they prefer not to do so.

We run nine conditions with 100 new participants each, plus as many participants from the 2021 collection as possible. Our conditions comprise the unmodified density forecast from the New York SCE plus eight modifications to the scale. Participants that were part of the 2021 collection will be part of the same treatment again.
External Link(s)

Registration Citation

Citation
Becker, Christoph, Peter Duersch and Thomas Eife. 2023. "Measuring inflation expectations: How stable are density forecasts?." AEA RCT Registry. January 03. https://doi.org/10.1257/rct.10633-1.0
Experimental Details

Interventions

Intervention(s)
Intervention: Eliciting inflation density forecasts using different scales.
Intervention Start Date
2022-12-16
Intervention End Date
2022-12-23

Primary Outcomes

Primary Outcomes (end points)
(i) Individual density forecasts of the 12-month ahead inflation rate [Q1]
(ii) Individual estimate if 12 months from now the inflation rate will be positive or negative (deflation) [Q3]
(iii) Individual point forecast of the 12-month ahead inflation rate [Q5]
Primary Outcomes (explanation)
(i) Participants distribute probabilities on a scale of possible inflation rates with 8-10 bins (depending on treatment). Probabilities need to add up to 100.
(ii) Participants are asked to state whether they think inflation or deflation is more likely occur 12 months from now.
(iii) Participants are asked about a point estimation depending on their answer in (ii). If they answered “deflation”, they will be asked for a point forecast for deflation and similarly for inflation.

Secondary Outcomes

Secondary Outcomes (end points)
(i) Participants certainty regarding their answers to [Q1, Q3, Q5]. [Q2, Q4, Q6]
(ii) Demographics (age, gender, education, US state of residence) [Questionnaire]
(iii) Financial literacy [Questionnaire]
(iv) Knowledge of inflation target [Questionnaire]
Secondary Outcomes (explanation)
(i) Ordinal measurement of certainty (six-point Likert scale).
(ii) Answers will be used as control variables.
(iii) We use the three multiple-choice questions from Lusardi and Mitchell (2011).
(iv) Multiple-choice question that tests if participants know the inflation target of the Fed.

Experimental Design

Experimental Design
Participants in the survey will be asked about their density forecast for the inflation 12 months from now [Q1]. The question for this density forecast is directly taken from the NY Fed. After the density forecast, participants will state whether they expect inflation or deflation 12 months from now [Q3] and then give their inflation expectations again in a point forecast [Q5]. Both questions are also taken from the NY Fed SCE. This will allow us to check if the predictions of these questions align. After each of these questions, participants state how certain they are regarding their answer on a six-item Likert scale [Q2, Q4, Q6]. After this, the participants will answer a questionnaire including control and demographic questions [Questionnaire].

Participants in the main part of the experiment will take part in either the Baseline or one of eight possible treatments. In the Baseline participants will answer the density forecast as it is currently used by the NY Fed and the Bundesbank. The Baseline will serve as a benchmark for our other treatments.
Experimental Design Details
Participants in the survey will be asked about their density forecast for the inflation 12 months from now [Q1]. The question for this density forecast is directly taken from the NY Fed. After the density forecast, participants will state whether they expect inflation or deflation 12 months from now [Q3] and then give their inflation expectations again in a point forecast [Q5]. Both questions are also taken from the NY Fed SCE. This will allow us to check if the predictions of these questions align. After each of these questions, participants state how certain they are regarding their answer on a six-item Likert scale [Q2, Q4, Q6]. After this, the participants will answer a questionnaire including control and demographic questions [Questionnaire].

Participants in the main part of the experiment will take part in either the Baseline or one of eight possible treatments. In the Baseline participants will answer the density forecast as it is currently used by the NY Fed and the Bundesbank. The Baseline will serve as a benchmark for our other treatments. Our treatment interventions fall into two broad categories: Shifting and Centralization.
In the six Shifting treatments, the scale will be shifted to either the right or the left. Both shifts are implemented in different proportions, to test how larger shifts affect the answers. Specifically, these six treatments include the four Shifting treatments from 2021, which had encompassed to treatments shifting the scale towards inflation and two that shifted the scale towards deflation. As the current US inflation rate has steadily increased since 2021, we include two additional Shifting treatments that further shift the scale towards inflation.
The second set of treatments is designated Centralization. A feature of the NY Fed density forecast is that bins closer to the midpoint are smaller compared to others. This can complicate some computations, such as deriving a continuous belief distribution. Our 2021 Centralization treatments vary the number of bins around the midpoint. In the 2022 data collection we include one of these treatments, which has completely even bin sizes. Additionally, we include the same even-width Centralization treatment but shifted towards higher inflation rates. This allows us to further test how well the even-width Centralization treatment performs for the currently higher inflation rates.

In order to recruit a representative sample of the US population, we will run the survey on the online research platform Prolific. We will recruit two samples: First, a sample of 100 new participants for each of the nine treatments. Second, we will try to recruit as many participants as possible from the 2021 data collection. These participants will be assigned to the same treatment as in 2021. Data for both samples will be collected in parallel, to ensure a sufficient time window to resample participants from 2021. We aim to gather data for at least half of the participants from 2021. New participants will be assigned one of the nine treatments iteratively when starting the study. This way, we make sure that any differences we obtain are not driven by timing but instead reflect a genuine effect of our treatment intervention. Participants will earn a fixed fee of £1 for their participation.
Randomization Method
Randomization of treatments done by the experimental software.
Randomization Unit
Individual
Was the treatment clustered?
No

Experiment Characteristics

Sample size: planned number of clusters
1200 Prolific participants
Sample size: planned number of observations
1200 Prolific participants
Sample size (or number of clusters) by treatment arms
100 new participants per one of the 9 treatments (900 total) plus 50+ participants per one of the 6 old treatments (up to 300 total) from 2021
Minimum detectable effect size for main outcomes (accounting for sample design and clustering)
Test if the mean between any two treatments differs. Test used is two-sample t-test, assuming equal variances in both treatment groups. For a group size of 100, power calculation (alpha = 0.05, beta = 0.8) informs us that the minimum detectable effect size would be a difference in means of 0.398.
Supporting Documents and Materials

Documents

Document Name
IRB approval
Document Type
other
Document Description
Copy of the IRB approval
File
IRB approval

MD5: 5a4f5649ac5f875a8038cb0ba649cba6

SHA1: a515f36a1b6c7d7c49d20bc403ca3cdd0266fc92

Uploaded At: December 13, 2022

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IRB

Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)

IRB Name
IRB of the Alfred-Weber-Institute for Economics, Heidelberg University
IRB Approval Date
2022-12-06
IRB Approval Number
FESS-HD-2022-010

Post-Trial

Post Trial Information

Study Withdrawal

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Intervention

Is the intervention completed?
No
Data Collection Complete
Data Publication

Data Publication

Is public data available?
No

Program Files

Program Files
Reports, Papers & Other Materials

Relevant Paper(s)

Reports & Other Materials