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Economic development and inflation: a theoretical and empirical analysis
Authors:André Roncaglia de Carvalho  Rafael S. M. Ribeiro  André M. Marques
Affiliation:1. Department of Economics, Federal University of S?o Paulo, Osasco, Brazilandre.carvalho@unifesp.br;3. Institute of Economics Research, School of Economics, Business and Accounting, University of S?o Paulo (IPE-USP), S?o Paulo, Brazil;4. Department of Economics, Federal University of Paraiba, Jo?o Pessoa, Brazil
Abstract:This paper studies the relation between inflation and economic development. The literature is largely silent regarding both the theoretical and empirical perspectives that undeveloped countries endure higher average inflation than developed economies. We present a simple theoretical model linking the inflation phenomenon to the tradition of development economics. Empirical evidence is garnered to test the hypothesis that economic development engenders a downward bias to inflation rates. Through the feasible-GLS estimator in a panel of 65 countries from 2001 to 2011, we aim at listing a number of variables most commonly used to explain differences in the stage of economic development across countries and identifying the most statistically relevant ones to account for differences in inflationary patterns. While our results show that inflation is inversely correlated with the level of the technological content of the economy (measured by share of high-tech exports), human capital and cyclical unemployment, it is directly related to the degree of inflation persistence and terms of trade growth. However, our findings still present an inverse and low correlation between inflation persistence and economic development, implying that development-sensitive variables allowed into the model can only partially account for the differences in inflation at different levels of economic development.
Keywords:Economic development  inflation  FGLS estimator
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