Measuring expectations of inflation: Effects of survey mode, wording, and opportunities to revise
Published: 07 March 2016
By: Wändi Bruine de Bruin Wilbert van der Klaauw Maarten van Rooij Federica Teppa Klaas de Vos
Several national consumer surveys aim to elicit consumers’ inflation expectations. Median reported expectations have been shown to track objective inflation estimates over time, although respondents display relatively large disagreement. Observed medians, however, tend to differ between consumer surveys, possibly reflecting survey design differences. In this paper, we examine the importance of three survey features in explaining these differences: question wording (‘prices in general’ vs. ‘inflation’), interview mode (face-to-face vs. web), and the explicit opportunity to revise responses. We find systematic effects on item non-responses, reported inflation expectations and their dispersion. We discuss implications of our findings for survey design.
Keywords: Consumer surveys, inflation expectations, question wording, mode effects.
JEL Classifications: E31, D84.
Working paper no. 506.
506 - Measuring expectations of inflation: Effects of survey mode, wording, and opportunities to revise
Discover related articles
DNB uses cookies
We use cookies to optimise the user-friendliness of our website.
Read more about the cookies we use and the data they collect in our cookie notice.