Volume 19, Issue 2 June 2023

Macroeconomic Surprises and the Demand for Information about Monetary Policy

Abstract

This paper studies the demand for information about monetary policy, while the literature on central bank transparency and communication typically studies the supply of information by the central bank or the reception of the information provided. We use a new data set on the number of views of the Federal Reserve’s website and show that exogenous news about the state of the economy as reflected in U.S. macroeconomic news surprises raise the demand for information about monetary policy. Surprises trigger an increase in the number of views of the policy-relevant sections of the website, but not the other sections. Hence, we show that market participants not only revise their policy expectations after a surprise, but also actively acquire new information.

Authors

  • Peter Tillmann

JEL codes

  • E52
  • E58
  • E32

Other papers in this issue

Dieter Gramlich and Thomas Walker and Yunfei Zhao and Mohammad Bitar

Martin Gächter and Martin Geiger and Elias Hasler

Michele Ca' Zorzi and Luca Dedola and Georgios Georgiadis and Marek Jarociński and Livio Stracca and Georg Strasser