Using the ECB Survey of Professional Forecasters we find evidence that those forecasters draw systematically biased predictions and disagree even if they forecast the same variable. Recent theoretical advances in the macroeconomics of imperfect information relate these bias and disagreement to theories of inattention. We provide a micro data estimation of the extent of inattention among professional forecasters. We show that, on our sample, about 20% of professional forecasters are inattentive to new information released each quarter. However, a formal test reveals that this observed inattention cannot generate the extent of systematic forecasting errors and disagreement among forecasters characterizing the data. There is more stickiness in expectations than the one the mere inattention is able to generate.Keywords: Expectations, information, disagreement, inattention, business cycle * We thank Anil Kashyap, Noburo Kiyotaki, Bartosz Maćkowiak, Ernesto Pastén, Giorgio Primiceri, Jonathan Willis, Alexander Wolman, Michael Woodford and seminar participants at the ECB and Banque de France for useful comments. We are also grateful to Sylvie Tarrieu for superb research assistance as to Claudia Marchini and Ieva Rubene for their help with the SPF data. This paper does not reflect the views of the Banque de France.