Inflation: It's not what it appears to be!
- https://www.smeal.psu.edu/alumni/events/inflation-its-not-what-it-appears-to-be
- Inflation: It's not what it appears to be!
- 2018-09-19T13:00:00-04:00
- 2018-09-19T14:00:00-04:00
- Free Smeal Webinar
- What Events Front Page Free webinar
- When Sep 19, 2018 from 01:00 PM to 02:00 PM (America/New_York / UTC-400)
- Where Zoom Online Webinar Platform
- Contact Name Cindi Satterfield
- Attendees Alumni, Students, Faculty, Staff, Friends
- Web Visit external website
- Add event to calendar iCal
Dr. Brent Ambrose is the Smeal Professor of Real Estate, Director of the Institute for Real Estate Studies, and Director of the Smeal College Ph.D. Program. He specializes in real estate finance, corporate finance, and fixed income security analysis. Dr. Ambrose has consulted with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Congressional Budget on many important issues.
Dr. Jiro Yoshida is Associate Professor at the Smeal College of Business and Fellow at the Institute for Real Estate Studies. He also serves as Research Associate at Columbia Business School, Senior Research Fellow at the Ministry of Finance of Japan, and Research Fellow at the Housing Research and Advancement Foundation of Japan. Dr. Yoshida’s area of research includes asset pricing, real estate finance, and macroeconomics. He is a recipient of the dissertation award from American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association and Fulbright Scholarship.
Consumer prices may be more volatile than are represented in current government inflation indexes. These indexes are used to guide a range of economic decisions including guidance on interest rates and Social Security cost-of-living adjustments. This webinar will discuss new research that shows how housing rent information collected by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis may lead to errors in the official inflation rates. Since housing makes up a large part of the inflation indexes, small errors in their measurement can have sizable impacts on official inflation pronouncements. For example, our analysis indicates that the official inflation rate was overestimated by up to 4% during the Great Recession and is currently underestimated by almost 1%. At the end, find out about the new Penn State Alternative Inflation Index that will be published monthly starting in Fall 2018!