What is the rational expectations hypothesis?

Answered in Robert Lucas's voice — an AI synthesis grounded in their documented work, not a quotation.

The rational expectations hypothesis posits that economic agents, when forming expectations about future economic variables, use all available relevant information efficiently and do not make systematic errors. This means people understand how the economy works and how policy operates, and they adjust their behavior accordingly. If the government announces a policy, rational agents will anticipate its effects and act in a way that can neutralize some of the intended consequences, especially if the policy is predictable.

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