On the Welfare and Cyclical Implications of Moderate Trend Inflation

44 Pages Posted: 27 Jul 2015 Last revised: 15 Jun 2025

See all articles by Guido Ascari

Guido Ascari

University of Pavia

Louis Phaneuf

Universite du Quebec a Montreal; Centre interuniversitaire sur le risque, les politiques économiques et l'emploi (CIRPÉE)

Eric R. Sims

University of Michigan at Ann Arbor; University of Notre Dame - Department of Economics

Date Written: July 2015

Abstract

We offer a comprehensive evaluation of the welfare and cyclical implications of moderate trend inflation. In an extended version of a medium-scale New Keynesian model, recent proposals to increase trend inflation from 2 to 4 percent would generate a consumption-equivalent welfare loss of 3.7 percent based on the non-stochastic steady state and of 6.9 percent based on the stochastic mean. Welfare costs of this magnitude are driven by four main factors: i) multiperiod nominal wage contracting, ii) trend growth in investment-specific and neutral technology, iii) roundaboutness in the U.S. production structure, and iv) and the interaction between trend inflation and shocks to the marginal efficiency of investment (MEI), insofar that this type of shock is sufficiently persistent. Moreover, moderate trend inflation has important cyclical implications. It interacts much more strongly with MEI shocks than with either productivity or monetary shocks.

Suggested Citation

Ascari, Guido and Phaneuf, Louis and Sims, Eric R., On the Welfare and Cyclical Implications of Moderate Trend Inflation (July 2015). NBER Working Paper No. w21392, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2636152

Guido Ascari (Contact Author)

University of Pavia ( email )

27100 Pavia
Italy
+39 0382 506211 (Phone)
+39 304226 (Fax)

Louis Phaneuf

Universite du Quebec a Montreal ( email )

P.O. Box 8888, Downtown Station
Montreal, Quebec H3C 3P8
Canada
514-987-6181 (Phone)

Centre interuniversitaire sur le risque, les politiques économiques et l'emploi (CIRPÉE)

Pavillon De Sève
Ste-Foy, Quebec G1K 7P4
Canada

Eric R. Sims

University of Michigan at Ann Arbor ( email )

500 S. State Street
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
United States

University of Notre Dame - Department of Economics ( email )

Notre Dame, IN 46556
United States

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