Abstract
A planner and agent in a permanent-income economy cannot observe part of the state, regard their model as an approximation, and value decision rules that are robust across a set of models. They use robust decision theory to choose allocations. Equilibrium prices reflect the preference for robustness and so embody a “market price of Knightian uncertainty.” We compute market prices of risk and compare them with a model that assumes that the state is fully observed. We use detection error probabilities to constrain a single parameter that governs the taste for robustness.
Full Citation
Hansen, Lars, Thomas Sargent, and Neng Wang. “Robust Permanent Income and Pricing with Filtering.”
Macroeconomic Dynamics
vol. 6,
(January 01, 2002): 40-84.