Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
This article identifies shocks to the Federal Reserve's inflation target as vector autoregression innovations that make the largest contribution to future movements in long‐horizon inflation expectations. The effectiveness of this scheme is documented via Monte‐Carlo experiments. The estimated impulse responses indicate that a positive shock to the target is associated with a large increase in inflation and long‐term interest rates in the United States. Target shocks are estimated to be a vital factor behind the increase in inflation during the pre‐1980 period and are an important driver of the decline in long‐term interest rates over the last two decades.