Rational Expectations and Ambiguity: A Comment on Abel
Content
Abel (2002) proposes a resolution of the riskfree rate and the equity
premium puzzles by considering pessimism and doubt. Pessimism is characterized by subjective probabilistic beliefs about asset returns that are
stochastically dominated by the objective distribution of these returns.
The subjective distribution is characterized by doubt if it is a mean-
preserving spread of the objective distribution. This note offers a decision
theoretic foundation of Abel's ad-hoc definitions of pessimism and doubt
under the assumption that individuals exhibit ambiguity attitudes in the
sense of Schmeidler (1989). In particular, we show that the behavior of
a representative agent, who resolves her uncertainty with respect to the
true distribution of asset returns in a pessimistic way, is the equivalent to
pessimism in Abel's sense. Furthermore, a representative agent, who takes
into account pessimistic as well as optimistic considerations, may result in
the equivalent to doubt in Abel's sense.
Publication Details