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The Global Component of Local Inflation: Revisiting the Empirical Content of the Global Slack Hypothesis with Bayesian Methods

aResearch Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA
bEconomics Department, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX, USA e-mail:

Monetary Policy in the Context of the Financial Crisis: New Challenges and Lessons

ISBN: 978-1-78441-780-2, eISBN: 978-1-78441-779-6

Publication date: 1 July 2015

Abstract

The global slack hypothesis is central to the discussion of the trade-offs that monetary policy faces in an increasingly more integrated world. The workhorse New Open Economy Macro (NOEM) model of Martínez-García and Wynne (2010), which fleshes out this hypothesis, shows how expected future local inflation and global slack affect current local inflation. In this chapter, I propose the use of the orthogonalization method of Aoki (1981) and Fukuda (1993) on the workhorse NOEM model to further decompose local inflation into a global component and an inflation differential component. I find that the log-linearized rational expectations model of Martínez-García and Wynne (2010) can be solved with two separate subsystems to describe each of these two components of inflation.

I estimate the full NOEM model with Bayesian techniques using data for the United States and an aggregate of its 38 largest trading partners from 1980Q1 until 2011Q4. The Bayesian estimation recognizes the parameter uncertainty surrounding the model and calls on the data (inflation and output) to discipline the parameterization. My findings show that the strength of the international spillovers through trade – even in the absence of common shocks – is reflected in the response of global inflation and is incorporated into local inflation dynamics. Furthermore, I find that key features of the economy can have different impacts on global and local inflation – in particular, I show that the parameters that determine the import share and the price-elasticity of trade matter in explaining the inflation differential component but not the global component of inflation.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

I would like to thank Yamin Ahmad, Roberto Duncan, María Teresa Martínez-García and many others for helpful suggestions and comments. I also acknowledge the excellent research assistance provided by Bradley Graves and Valerie Grossman. All remaining errors are mine alone. The views expressed in this chapter are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, or the Federal Reserve System.

Citation

Martínez-García, E. (2015), "The Global Component of Local Inflation: Revisiting the Empirical Content of the Global Slack Hypothesis with Bayesian Methods", Monetary Policy in the Context of the Financial Crisis: New Challenges and Lessons (International Symposia in Economic Theory and Econometrics, Vol. 24), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 51-112. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1571-038620150000024016

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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