Contingent Expectations

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A01=Alexander Nutzenadel
A01=Jochen Streb
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Author_Jochen Streb
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780691248530
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 19 May 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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An empirical analysis and new theoretical framework for understanding economic expectations and decision-making in different historical settings.

Expectations play a crucial role in shaping economic behavior. But how are expectations actually formed, and how has this changed over time? The financial crisis of 2007–08 cast doubt on traditional theories of expectation formation, particularly the rational expectations framework. In Contingent Expectations, Alexander Nützenadel and Jochen Streb examine the ways that past experiences influence the economic expectations and decision-making of households, investors, and policymakers through history, and offer an alternative perspective. Combining a comprehensive empirical analysis of expectation formation from the eighteenth century to the present day with an assessment of the relevant economic theory, Nützenadel and Streb present a new theoretical framework, contingent expectations, for understanding economic expectation.

Nützenadel and Streb show how economic actors developed new forecasting methods in response to rising uncertainty brought on by the Industrial Revolution, the expansion of global trade, financial market integration, and environmental crises. Tracing the evolution of economic theories on expectations, they find that when growing market volatility made forecasting more complex, economic agents often adapted with remarkable flexibility to changing circumstances. Challenging prevailing concepts of expectations, including rational choice and adaptive expectations, Nützenadel and Streb emphasize the heterogeneity of economic agents’ cognitive practices—in particular, the need to consider variation in information costs and historical experience. Expectation formation, they argue, is contingent on each individual’s current decision-making situation. Their account of the history of economic expectations has significant implications for current debates in economics.

Alexander Nützenadel is professor of economic and social history at Humboldt University of Berlin and a coauthor of Deutsche Bank: The Global Hausbank. Jochen Streb is professor of economic history at the University of Mannheim and the author most recently of Trumpf: The Story of a Family Business, about the German family-owned engineering company.

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