|
||||
|
||||
Testing the Sticky Information Phillips Curve
Olivier Coibion College of William and Mary; University of Michigan at Ann Arbor - Department of Economics 2007 Abstract: I consider the empirical evidence for the sticky information model of Mankiw and Reis (2002) relative to the basic sticky price model, conditional on historical measures of inflation forecasts. Overall, the evidence is unfavorable to the sticky information model of price-setting: the estimated structural parameters are inconsistent with an underlying sticky information model and the sticky-information Phillips Curve is statistically dominated by the New Keynesian Phillips Curve. I find that the poor performance of the sticky information approach is driven by two key elements. First, predicted inflation in the sticky information model places substantial weight on old forecasts of inflation. Because these consistently underestimate inflation in the 1970s and overestimate inflation since the 1980s, particularly at long forecast horizons, predicted inflation from the sticky information model inherits these patterns. Second, predicted inflation from the sticky information model is excessively smooth.
Keywords: Sticky Information, Expectations, Inflation JEL Classifications: E30, E37 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: October 26, 2007 ; Last revised: October 26, 2007Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
|||||||||||||||
© 2009 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy
This page was served by apollo 4 in 0.109 seconds.