What's Happened to the Phillips Curve?
39 Pages Posted: 10 Jan 2000
Date Written: September 20, 1999
Abstract
The simultaneous occurrence in the second half of the 1990s of low and falling price inflation and low unemployment appears to be at odds with the properties of a standard Phillips curve. We find this result in a model in which inflation depends on the unemployment rate, past inflation, and conventional measures of price supply shocks. We show that, in such a model, long lags of past inflation are preferred to short lags, and that with long lags, the NAIRU is estimated precisely but is unstable in the 1990s. Two alternative modifications to the standard Phillips curve restore stability. One replaces the unemployment rate with capacity utilization. Although this change leads to more accurate inflation predictions in the recent period, the predictive ability of the utilization rate is not superior to that of the unemployment rate for the 1955 to 1998 sample as a whole. The second, and preferred, modification augments the standard Phillips curve to include an "error-correction" mechanism involving the markup of prices over trend unit labor costs. With the markup relatively high through much of the 1990s, this channel is estimated to have held down inflation over this period, and thus provides an explanation of the recent low inflation.
JEL Classification: E31
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Efficient Tests for an Autoregressive Unit Root
By Graham Elliott, Thomas J. Rothenberg, ...
-
By James H. Stock and Mark W. Watson
-
The Time-Varying NAIRU and its Implications for Economic Policy
-
Evidence on Structural Instability in Macroeconomic Time Series Relations
By James H. Stock and Mark W. Watson
-
How Precise are Estimates of the Natural Rate of Unemployment?
By Douglas Staiger, James H. Stock, ...
-
Is There a Role for Monetary Aggregates in the Conduct of Monetary Policy?
-
Confidence Intervals for the Largest Autoresgressive Root in U.S. Macroeconomic Time Series
-
By Victor Zarnowitz and Phillip A. Braun
-
Price Inertia and Policy Ineffectiveness in the United States, 1890-1980
-
Exchange Rate Regimes and Shifts in Inflation Persistence: Does Nothing Else Matter?