This paper uses a dynamic factor model for the quarterly changes in consumption goods’
prices to separate them into three independent components: idiosyncratic relative-price
changes, a low-dimensional index of aggregate relative-price changes, and an index of
equiproportional changes in all inflation rates, that we label “pure” inflation. The paper
estimates the model on U.S. data since 1959, and it presents a simple structural model
that relates the three components of price changes to fundamental economic shocks. We
use the estimates of the pure inflation and aggregate relative-price components to answer
two questions. First, what share of the variability of inflation is associated with each
component, and how are they related to conventional measures of monetary policy and
relative-price shocks? We find that pure inflation accounts for 15-20% of the variability
in inflation while our aggregate relative-price index accounts most of the rest.
Conventional measures of relative prices are strongly but far from perfectly correlated
with our relative-price index; pure inflation is only weakly correlated with money growth
rates, but more strongly correlated with nominal interest rates. Second, what drives the
Phillips correlation between inflation and measures of real activity? We find that the
Phillips correlation essentially disappears once we control for goods’ relative-price
changes. This supports modern theories of inflation dynamics based on price rigidities
and many consumption goods.
by
econnews
2009-05-11 05:09
inflation
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paper
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US