On the Power and Weakness of Rational Expectations: Logical Fallacies, Periodic Bubbles and Business Cycles

Author: Alfred J Lotka, Alwyn Young, Alwyn Young, Alwyn Young, Dirk J Bezemer, Eduard Gracia, Eduard Gracia, Eduard Gracia, Eugene &amp, Eugene Fama, Finn E &amp, Fred Foldvary, Fred Harrison, Fred Harrison, Fred Jones, Indermit S Gill, J B Ramsey, James M Poterba, James Tobin, John B Long, John Shea, Jong-Il &amp, Jordi GalÔøΩ, Joseph Kitchin, Juglar, Mason Gaffney, Nikolai Kondratiev, Nobuhiro &amp, Olivier J Blanchard, Paul Davidson, Paul Krugman, Paul Samuelson, Richard Roll, Rineke Verbrugge, Robert Shiller, Sahlin N NeftÔøΩi, Simon &amp, Simon Kuznets, Stephen Wright, Steve Keen, Victor Zarnowitz, Vito Volterra, Weshah A Razzak
Publisher: Elsevier BV

ABOUT BOOK

A popular interpretation of the Rational Expectations/Efficient Markets hypothesis states that, if the hypothesis holds, then market valuations must follow a random walk. This postulate has frequently been criticized on the basis of empirical evidence. Yet the assertion itself incurs what we could call 'fallacy of probability diffusion symmetry': although market efficiency does indeed imply that the mean (i.e. expected) path must be a random walk, if the probability diffusion process is asymmetric then the observed path will most closely resemble not the mean but the median, which does not necessarily follow a random walk. To illustrate the implications, this paper develops an efficient markets model where the median path of Tobin's q ratio displays regular cycles of bubbles and crashes reflecting an agency problem between investors and producers. The model is tested against US market data, with results suggesting that such a regular cycle does indeed exist and is statistically significant. The aggregate production function in Gracia (Uncertainty and Capacity Constraints: Reconsidering the Aggregate Production Function, 2011) is then put forward to show how financial fluctuations can drive the business cycle by periodically impacting aggregate productivity and, as a consequence, GDP growth

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