Escaping volatile inflation.

Why has inflation been so stable in developed economies since the early 1990s? In this paper, we answer that the United States and other countries may have escaped from a volatile inflation equilibrium. Our argument builds on the story proposed by Tom Sargent in The Conquest of American Inflation, w...

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Main Authors: Ellison, M, Yates, T
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Blackwell Publishing 2007
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author Ellison, M
Yates, T
author_facet Ellison, M
Yates, T
author_sort Ellison, M
collection OXFORD
description Why has inflation been so stable in developed economies since the early 1990s? In this paper, we answer that the United States and other countries may have escaped from a volatile inflation equilibrium. Our argument builds on the story proposed by Tom Sargent in The Conquest of American Inflation, where the fall in inflation in the 1980s was attributed to changing government beliefs. To explain the escape in inflation volatility, we unwind one of Sargent's simplifications and allow the government to react to some of the shocks in the economy. In this case, when government beliefs turned against the Phillips curve in the 1980s they not only led to an escape from high inflation, but also stopped government using changes in inflation to offset shocks. Inflation and inflation volatility therefore escaped in tandem. Our analysis also sheds some light on why the escape in inflation occurred at the time it did.
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spelling oxford-uuid:628b3f2b-09f4-4479-91ce-3001447a61052022-03-26T18:06:52ZEscaping volatile inflation.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:628b3f2b-09f4-4479-91ce-3001447a6105EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrintsBlackwell Publishing2007Ellison, MYates, TWhy has inflation been so stable in developed economies since the early 1990s? In this paper, we answer that the United States and other countries may have escaped from a volatile inflation equilibrium. Our argument builds on the story proposed by Tom Sargent in The Conquest of American Inflation, where the fall in inflation in the 1980s was attributed to changing government beliefs. To explain the escape in inflation volatility, we unwind one of Sargent's simplifications and allow the government to react to some of the shocks in the economy. In this case, when government beliefs turned against the Phillips curve in the 1980s they not only led to an escape from high inflation, but also stopped government using changes in inflation to offset shocks. Inflation and inflation volatility therefore escaped in tandem. Our analysis also sheds some light on why the escape in inflation occurred at the time it did.
spellingShingle Ellison, M
Yates, T
Escaping volatile inflation.
title Escaping volatile inflation.
title_full Escaping volatile inflation.
title_fullStr Escaping volatile inflation.
title_full_unstemmed Escaping volatile inflation.
title_short Escaping volatile inflation.
title_sort escaping volatile inflation
work_keys_str_mv AT ellisonm escapingvolatileinflation
AT yatest escapingvolatileinflation