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Can We Measure Inflation with Twitter

Can We Measure Inflation with Twitter

Posted July 21, 2022
Elisabetta Basilico, Ph.D., CFA
Alpha Architect

The post “Can We Measure Inflation with Twitter” first appeared on Alpha Architect Blog.

Excerpt

Can We Measure Inflation Expectations Using Twitter?

  • Cristina Angelico, Juri Marcucci, Marcello Miccoli, Filippo Quarta
  • Journal of Econometrics, 2022
  • A version of this paper can be found here
  • Want to read our summaries of academic finance papers? Check out our Academic Research Insight category

What are the Research Questions?

Twitter is an interesting dataset for researchers interested in consumer beliefs. (200 million monthly active users worldwide (Elon Musk may disagree!) and about 10 million active users in Italy in 2019 (AGCOM 2020)).

Inflation expectations are at the heart of any consumption and investment decision of households and firms in the economy. There are two commonly used sources of inflation expectations: surveys and prices of financial assets linked to inflation. Both measures have relative advantages and drawbacks. The first is more accurate and less timely, the second more timely but less accurate.

The authors propose a new method that can be both timely and accurate and asks the following questions:

  1. Do tweets say something about inflation expectations?
  2. Does observing the Twitter-based indicators give an informative advantage on consumers’ expectations (given that survey data are not timely)?

What are the Academic Insights?

By drawing on Italian tweets, the authors employ textual data and machine learning techniques to build new real-time measures of consumers’ inflation expectations and find:

  1. YES, comparing the Twitter-based measures with lower frequency survey-based measures of consumers’ inflation expectations by ISTAT, they are strongly correlated (same result with market-based measures of inflation.
  2. YES, Twitter and the indicators developed by the authors capture relevant information, not included in market-based or consensus expectations.

Why does it matter?

This paper proposes a new source of data to measure inflation expectations that has some advantages
compared to the standard ones. First, it involves a wide variety and a large number of individuals, relative to market-based data that reflect traders’ opinions and survey measures that consider small samples of agents. Second, the high frequency of the data allows for the building of daily indicators, whereas polls are available at the monthly or quarterly frequency. Lastly, this data source is not linked specifically to any country, so it can be used and replicated in several instances.

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