Estimating The Inflation-Growth Nexus - A Smooth Transition Model
Author/Editor: Raphael A. Espinoza, Ananthakrishnan Prasad, H. L. Leon
Release Date: © March, 2010
ISBN
: 978-1-45198-219-0
Stock #: WPIEA2010076
English
Stock Status: Available
Languages and formats available
| English | French | Spanish | Arabic | Russian | Chinese | Portuguese | |
| Paperback | Yes | ||||||
| Yes |
Description
Motivated by the global inflation episode of 2007-08 and concern that high levels of inflation could undermine growth, this paper uses a panel of 165 countries and data for 1960-2007 to revisit the nexus between inflation and growth. We use a smooth transition model to investigate the speed at which inflation beyond a threshold becomes harmful to growth, an important consideration in the policy response to rising inflation as the world economy recovers. We estimate that for all country groups (except for advanced countries) inflation above a threshold of about 10 percent quickly becomes harmful to growth, suggesting the need for a prompt policy response to inflation at or above the relevant threshold. For the advanced economies, the threshold is much lower. For oil exporting countries, the estimates are less robust, possibly reflecting heterogeneity among oil producers, but the effect of higher inflation for oil producers is found to be stronger.
Taxonomy
Economic policy , Inflation , Monetary policy
More publications in this series: Working Papers
More publications by: Raphael A. Espinoza ; Ananthakrishnan Prasad ; H. L. Leon
