Is there Evidence of Pessimism and Doubt in Subjective Distributions? Implications for the Equity Premium Puzzle

Auteur(s)

Paolo Giordani

Accéder

Description

Abel (2002) shows that pessimism and doubt in the subjective distribution of the growth rate of consumption reduce the equity premium puzzle. We quantify the amount of pessimism and doubt in survey data on US consumption and income. Individual forecasters are in fact pessimistic, but show marked overconfidence rather than doubt. However, the implications for Abel's model depend on how the empirically heterogeneous beliefs are mapped into beliefs of a representative agent. We use an Arrow-Debreu economy to show that disagreement increases the equity premium. When incorporating this in our estimation, we find little empirical evidence of either overconfidence or doubt.

Langue

English

Date

2006

Le portail de l'information économique suisse

© 2016 Infonet Economy