Inflation persistence, noisy information and the Phillips curve

Jose E Gallegos
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

A vast literature has documented how US inflation persistence has fallen in recent decades, but this finding is difficult to explain in monetary models. Using survey data on inflation expectations, I document a positive co-movement between ex-ante average forecast errors and forecast revisions (suggesting forecast sluggishness) from 1968 to 1984, but no co-movement thereafter. I extend the New Keynesian setting to include noisy and dispersed information about the aggregate state, and show that inflation is more persistent in periods of greater forecast sluggishness. My results suggest that changes in firm forecasting behavior explain around 90% of the fall in inflation persistence since the mid-1980s. I also find that the changes in the dynamics of the Phillips curve can be explained by the change in information frictions. After controlling for changes in information frictions, I estimate only a modest decline in the slope. I find that a more significant factor in the dynamics of the Phillips curve is the shift towards greater forward-lookingness and less backward-lookingness. Finally, I find evidence of forecast underrevision in the post-COVID period, which explains the increase in the persistence of current inflation.
通货膨胀持续性,噪声信息和菲利普斯曲线
大量文献记录了近几十年来美国通胀持续性的下降,但这一发现很难用货币模型来解释。利用通胀预期的调查数据,我记录了1968年至1984年期间,事前平均预测误差和预测修正(表明预测疲软)之间的正联合运动,但此后没有联合运动。我扩展了新凯恩斯主义的背景,纳入了有关总体状态的嘈杂和分散的信息,并表明,在预测更为低迷的时期,通胀会更加持久。我的研究结果表明,自20世纪80年代中期以来,公司预测行为的变化可以解释约90%的通胀持续下降。我还发现菲利普斯曲线动力学的变化可以用信息摩擦的变化来解释。在控制了信息摩擦的变化之后,我估计斜率只会适度下降。我发现,在菲利普斯曲线的动态中,一个更重要的因素是,人们越来越倾向于向前看,越来越少地向后看。最后,我发现了后covid时期预测被低估的证据,这解释了当前通货膨胀持续加剧的原因。
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