Search results for "Inflation"

showing 10 items of 210 documents

Teorías monetarias poskeynesianas: una aproximación de la escuela francesa

2009

Este texto es una presentación sintética de las características esenciales de las teorías monetarias poskeynesianas. Deseamos mostrar que, en el marco institucional actual, éstas constituyen una herramienta útil para aprehender el funcionamiento de nuestras economías monetarias. Al descomponer las relaciones entre las esferas financiera y productiva, los poskeynesianos justifican la necesidad de promover una regulación monetaria y financiera. En el análisis se ve con claridad que la política monetaria no debe estar exclusivamente dedicada a la lucha contra la inflación, además de que el gran desentendimiento del Estado no deja exenta de riesgos a la estabilidad del sistema en su totalidad.

InflationEconomics and EconometricsEndogenous moneymedia_common.quotation_subjectWelfare economicsWishMonetary policyDevelopmentInterest rateFinancial regulationGeographyState (polity)Cartographymedia_commonProblemas del Desarrollo. Revista Latinoamericana de Economía
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Growth, inflation and the exchange rate regime

1996

Abstract According to the Balassa-Samuelson effect, growth and inflation are positively correlated in economies with pegged currencies. This paper shows that the costs of inflation on long-term growth are underestimated in samples that include countries and periods with fixed exchange rate regimes.

InflationEconomics and EconometricsExchange ratemedia_common.quotation_subjectKeynesian economicsEconomicsMonetary economicsExchange-rate regimeReal interest rateFinancemedia_commonEconomics Letters
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The P* model and its performance for the Spanish economy

2000

The performance of the P∗ model is tested as an inflation forecaster for the Spanish economy. It is shown that log-run relationships work as expected according to the model and the Quantitative Theory of Money. The Error Correction Model constructed by using the gap between actual prices and the long-term equilibrium price level as an error correction term, offers a consistent explanation for the short-run dynamics in prices. On the other hand, the P∗ approach shows a forecasting ability similar to that presented for other countries in several studies, although the degree of accuracy in the prediction is not specially satisfactory, mainly for the period 1989:3- 1992:3, when the credibility …

InflationEconomics and EconometricsInflation targetingmedia_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyEuropean Monetary SystemTerm (time)Error correction modelQuantity theory of moneyEconomyEconomicsPrice levelFinancemedia_commonApplied Financial Economics
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Does Inflation Targeting Affect the Trade-off Between Output Gap and Inflation Variability?

2002

We utilize a stochastic volatility model to analyse the possible effects of inflation targeting on the trade–off between output gap variability and inflation variability. We find that the adoption of inflation targets (in New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the UK, Sweden and Finland) might result in a more favourable monetary policy trade–off (except in Australia and Finland). This conclusion is reached by comparing, first, the economic performance of targeting countries in the 1980s and the 1990s; and second, the economic performance in the 1990s of targeting and non–targeting countries (the USA, Japan, Switzerland, Germany, France and the Netherlands). We focus on two possible explanations f…

InflationEconomics and EconometricsStochastic volatilityInflation targetingTransparency (market)media_common.quotation_subjectMonetary policyMonetary economicsTrade-offAffect (psychology)policy frontierstochastic volatility; state space model; policy frontierstate space modelOutput gapEconomicsstochastic volatilitymedia_common
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Unconventional monetary policy reaction functions: evidence from the US

2020

Abstract We specify unconventional monetary policy reaction functions for the Fed using linear and nonlinear econometric frameworks. We find that nonstandard policy measures are largely driven by the dynamics of inflation and the output gap, with the effect being particularly strong during QE rounds. Moreover, we uncover the presence of asymmetry and regime dependence in central bank’s actions since the global financial crisis, especially concerning the response of the term spread and the shadow short rate to the growth rate of central bank reserves. From a policy perspective and given the lack of a systematic response of monetary policy to asset price growth in nonstandard times, our findi…

InflationEconomics and Econometricsasset pricescentral bank reservesmedia_common.quotation_subjectshadow short rateunconventional monetary policy reaction functionMonetary economicsasset price0502 economics and businessSystemic riskAsset (economics)050207 economicscentral bank reserveinflationShadow (psychology)media_common050208 finance05 social sciencesMonetary policy1. No povertyJEL: E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics/E.E5 - Monetary Policy Central Banking and the Supply of Money and Credit/E.E5.E51 - Money Supply • Credit • Money MultipliersJEL: I - Health Education and Welfare/I.I2 - Education and Research Institutions/I.I2.I21 - Analysis of Education[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Financeterm spreadOutput gap8. Economic growthFinancial crisisShort ratenonlinear modeloutput gapJEL: E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics/E.E4 - Money and Interest Rates/E.E4.E43 - Interest Rates: Determination Term Structure and Effectsnonlinear modelsSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Analysis
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How does monetary policy respond to the dynamics of the shadow banking sector?

2020

We investigate the response of the central bank to the change in size of non-bank financial intermediaries. Using quarterly data for the U.S. over the period 1946:Q1-2016Q4, we find that when faced with an increase in the asset growth of the securities' brokers and dealers and the shadow banking sector, the monetary authority reacts by raising the short-term nominal interest rate. This response is stronger in the case of sharp variation in the size of the balance sheet of nonbank financial intermediaries. From a policy perspective, our study suggests that an extended version of the original Taylor rule - embedding both price stability and financial stability concerns – provides a good chara…

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectFinancial intermediarymonetary policyMonetary economicsnonbank financial intermediarieTaylor ruleAccounting0502 economics and businessEconomicsBalance sheet050207 economicsPrice of stabilityinflationmedia_common050208 financeshadow banking05 social sciencesMonetary policySettore SECS-P/02 Politica Economicaasset growthTaylor ruleNominal interest rateMonetary policy reaction function8. Economic growthFinance
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The role of the financial system in the growth–inflation link: the OECD experience

2004

Abstract This paper jointly estimates the effects of financial development and inflation on growth using both cross-section and time-series dimensions of the data on inflation, growth, and some banking and stock market indicators over the period 1961–1993 for a sample of OECD countries. Overall, the results indicate, first, that the long-run costs of inflation are not explained by policies of financial repression and, second, that if inflation affects growth through its interaction with financial market conditions, this is not the only (nor the most important) channel.

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectFinancial ratioFinancial systemFinancial repressionIndirect financePolitical Science and International RelationsMarket dataEconomicsPosition (finance)Economic stabilityFinancial market efficiencymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Political Economy
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Global Food Prices and Domestic Inflation: Some Cross-Country Evidence

2015

We study the impact of global food price shocks on domestic inflation in a large group of countries. For advanced economies, a 10% increase in global food inflation raises domestic inflation by about 0.5 percentage point after a year; however, the impact has declined over time and become less persistent. The global food price shocks of the 2000s had a much bigger impact on domestic inflation in emerging and developing economies than in advanced economies. This could reflect the smaller share of food in the consumption baskets in advanced economies. We also provide evidence that inflation expectations are more anchored in advanced than in emerging economies, which could also explain the smal…

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectFood pricesDeveloping countryMonetary economicsInflation;Food prices;pass-through food economies food price General Monetary Policy (Targets Instruments and Effects) Open Economy MacroeconomicsQ020502 economics and businessEconomicsPrice level050207 economicsE58Emerging marketsE31Price shockGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonConsumption (economics)050208 financeCross countryInformal sectorEconomic sector05 social sciencesInternational economicsQ11DeflationGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesDeveloped countryIMF Working Papers
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Change of regime and Phillips curve stability: The case of Spain, 1964–2002

2007

Following the emergence of the Lucas critique, traditional Phillips curves relating inflation to a measure of the level of activity, and augmented to include past inflation (assumed to proxy expected inflation), have been deemed to be highly unstable over time. In this paper we try to investigate, using recent econometric developments, whether such a statement can be supported over a long time period. In the empirical application, we analyze the case of Spain along the period 1964–2002.

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectKeynesian economicsEconomicsProxy (statistics)Phillips curveStability (probability)Lucas critiquemedia_commonJournal of Policy Modeling
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Some new results on interest rate rules in EMU and in the US

2000

Abstract This paper offers two new results on interest rate rules. First, we show that the empirical evidence from 1970 onwards for the US is compatible with a Taylor rule when we consider the possibility of changes in the inflation target and in the real interest rate. Second, recursive estimates of a forward-looking version of the Taylor rule for EMU confirm an increasing weight for inflation in the area, possibly as a consequence of the EMS, and, furthermore, a convergence in the nineties to the German value observed for the whole period. This process has coincided with an important reduction in the deviation of inflation across EMU countries. The results also show that credibility probl…

InflationEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectKeynesian economicsMonetary policyInternational Fisher effectGeneral Business Management and AccountingInterest rateTaylor ruleNominal interest rateEconometricsEconomicsFisher hypothesisReal interest ratemedia_common
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