IMF Working Papers

Aggregate Shocks and the Formation of Preferences and Beliefs

By Paola Giuliano, Antonio Spilimbergo

September 13, 2024

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Paola Giuliano, and Antonio Spilimbergo. Aggregate Shocks and the Formation of Preferences and Beliefs, (USA: International Monetary Fund, 2024) accessed September 14, 2024

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Summary

A growing body of work has shown that aggregate shocks affect the formation of preferences and beliefs. This article reviews evidence from sociology, social psychology, and economics to assess the relevance of aggregate shocks, whether the period in which they are experienced matters, and whether they alter preferences and beliefs permanently. We review the literature on recessions, inflation experiences, trade shocks, and aggregate non-economic shocks including migrations, wars, terrorist attacks, pandemics, and natural disasters. For each aggregate shock, we discuss the main empirical methodologies, their limitations, and their comparability across studies, outlining possible mechanisms whenever available. A few conclusions emerge consistently across the reviewed papers. First, aggregate shocks impact many preferences and beliefs, including political preferences, risk attitudes, and trust in institutions. Second, the effect of shocks experienced during young adulthood is stronger and longer lasting. Third, negative aggregate economic shocks generally move preferences and beliefs to the right of the political spectrum, while the effects of non-economic adverse shocks are more heterogeneous and depend on the context.

Subject: Aging, COVID-19, Crime, Economic growth, Economic recession, Environment, Health, Inflation, Migration, Natural disasters, Population and demographics, Prices, Terrorism

Keywords: Aging, COVID-19, Economic recession, Imports, Inflation, Migration, Natural disasters, Terrorism, Unemployment

Publication Details

  • Pages:

    67

  • Volume:

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  • DOI:

    ---

  • Issue:

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  • Series:

    Working Paper No. 2024/195

  • Stock No:

    WPIEA2024195

  • ISBN:

    9798400288654

  • ISSN:

    1018-5941