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Prospects for inflation in a high pressure economy: Is the Phillips curve dead or is it just hibernating?
Institution:1. Economic Research, Deutsche Bank Securities, Inc, United States;2. Graduate School of Business, Columbia University, United States;3. National Bureau of Economic Research, United States;4. Booth School of Business, University of Chicago, United States;1. Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, Argentina;2. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Estadística, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Argentina;1. Department of Economics, University of Minnesota Duluth, 1318 Kirby Dr., Duluth, MN 55812, United States;2. Department of Economics, Lehigh University, 621 Taylor Street, Rauch Business Center Room 457, Bethlehem, PA 18105, United States
Abstract:As the US labor market has tightened beyond full employment with relatively little evidence of inflation pressure, observers are increasingly inclined to declare the demise of the Phillips curve, that is, the flattening of its slope to zero. This paper reviews a substantial range of empirical evidence on this point, by assessing the performance of the conventional expectations-augmented Phillips curve for both prices and wages, based on both historical macro or national level data and panel data for states and MSAs (cities). National data going back to the 1950s and 60s yield strong evidence of negative slopes and significant nonlinearity in those slopes, with slopes much steeper in tight labor markets than in easy labor markets. This evidence of both slope and nonlinearity weakens dramatically based on macro data since the 1980s for the price Phillips curve, but not the wage Phillips curve. However, the endogeneity of monetary policy and the lack of variation of the unemployment gap, which has few episodes of being substantially below zero in this sample period, makes the price Phillips curve estimates from this period less reliable. At the same time, state level and MSA level data since the 1980s yield significant evidence of both negative slope and nonlinearity in the Phillips curve. The difference between national and city/state results in recent decades can be explained by the success that monetary policy has had in quelling inflation and anchoring inflation expectations since the 1980s. We also review the experience of the 1960s, the last time inflation expectations became unanchored, and observe both parallels and differences with today. Our analysis suggests that reports of the death of the Phillips curve may be greatly exaggerated.
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