We test whether outside experts have information not available to insiders by using the voting record of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee. Members with more private information should vote more often against conventional wisdom, which we measure as the average belief of market economists about future interest rates. We find evidence that external members indeed have information not available to internals, but also use a quasi-natural experiment to show they may exaggerate their expertise to obtain reappointment. This implies that an optimal committee, even outside monetary policy, should potentially include outsiders, but needs to manage career concerns
A committee makes a decision on a project on behalf of "the public." Members of the committee agree ...
textabstractSome committees are made up of experts, persons who care both about the matter at hand a...
A committee makes a decision on a project on behalf of "the public." Members of the committee agree ...
We test whether outside experts have information not available to insiders by using the voting recor...
Using Bank of England voting data, we show empirically that members’ votes are driven by heterogene...
Using Bank of England voting data, we show empirically that members ’ votes are driven by heteroge-n...
The use of independent committees for the setting of interest rates, such as the Monetary Policy Com...
Using voting data from the Bank of England, we show that different individual assessments of the eco...
A large theoretical literature assumes that experts differ in terms of preferences and the distribut...
Economic theory typically assumes that monetary policy is set by a single policy-maker. However, the...
A large theoretical literature assumes that experts differ in terms of preferences and the distribut...
The results of an econometric exercise are presented, showing that Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) m...
Over the last two decades central bank independence has becomethe default for the conduct of monetar...
We investigate the implications for the setting of interest rateswhen monetary policy decisions are ...
There is a small, but growing, economics literature on the importance and e¤ects of having monetary ...
A committee makes a decision on a project on behalf of "the public." Members of the committee agree ...
textabstractSome committees are made up of experts, persons who care both about the matter at hand a...
A committee makes a decision on a project on behalf of "the public." Members of the committee agree ...
We test whether outside experts have information not available to insiders by using the voting recor...
Using Bank of England voting data, we show empirically that members’ votes are driven by heterogene...
Using Bank of England voting data, we show empirically that members ’ votes are driven by heteroge-n...
The use of independent committees for the setting of interest rates, such as the Monetary Policy Com...
Using voting data from the Bank of England, we show that different individual assessments of the eco...
A large theoretical literature assumes that experts differ in terms of preferences and the distribut...
Economic theory typically assumes that monetary policy is set by a single policy-maker. However, the...
A large theoretical literature assumes that experts differ in terms of preferences and the distribut...
The results of an econometric exercise are presented, showing that Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) m...
Over the last two decades central bank independence has becomethe default for the conduct of monetar...
We investigate the implications for the setting of interest rateswhen monetary policy decisions are ...
There is a small, but growing, economics literature on the importance and e¤ects of having monetary ...
A committee makes a decision on a project on behalf of "the public." Members of the committee agree ...
textabstractSome committees are made up of experts, persons who care both about the matter at hand a...
A committee makes a decision on a project on behalf of "the public." Members of the committee agree ...