137 research outputs found
What Drives US Inflation and Unemployment in the Long Run?
There is a growing consensus on the existence of a positive, long-run relation between inflation and unemployment in the US economy. However, the conclusion that the two variables move in the same direction at low frequencies leaves open the question of the identification of the factors - real or, alternatively, monetary - underlying this co-movement. In this paper we try to shed light on this question by adopting a structural VAR agnostic approach. The main conclusion is that in the postwar US economy an important role has been played by supply shocks in shaping the long-run evolution of unemployment. Thus, it seems that this evidence is at odds with purely monetary explanation of the co-movement between inflation and unemployment
Sources of Unemployment Fluctuations in the USA and in the Euro Area in the Last Decade
The aim of this paper is to investigate the role played by macroeconomic shocks in shaping unemployment fluctuations, both in the USA and in the Euro area, in the recent, European Monetary Union, period. The task is accomplished by estimating a VAR model which jointly considers US and European variables. We identify the structural disturbances through sign restrictions on the dynamic response of variables. Our results show that there are real effects of monetary policy shocks and of non-monetary policy, financial shocks in both economic areas. Moreover, a significant role is also exerted by business cycle, adverse aggregate demand shocks. Not surprisingly, in the last decade an important role has been played by financial shocks
Euro Area Inflation as a Predictor of National Inflation Rates
The stability of inflation differentials is an important condition for the
smooth working of a currency area, such as the European Economic and Monetary Union. In the presence of stability, changes in national inflation rates, while
holding Euro-area inflation fixed contemporaneously, should be only transitory.
If this is the case, the rate of inflation of the whole area can also be interpreted
as a predictor, at least in the long run, of the different national inflation rates.
However, in this paper we show that this condition is satisfied only for a small
number of countries, including France and Italy. Better convergence results for
inflation differentials are, instead, found for the USA
Euro area Inflation as a Predictor of National Inflation Rates
The stability of inflation differentials is an important condition for the
smooth working of a currency area, such as the European Economic and Monetary
Union. In the presence of stability, changes in national inflation rates, while
holding Euro-area inflation fixed contemporaneously, should be only transitory.
If this is the case, the rate of inflation of the whole area can also be interpreted
as a predictor, at least in the long run, of the different national inflation rates.
However, in this paper we show that this condition is satisfied only for a small
number of countries, including France and Italy. Better convergence results for
inflation differentials are, instead, found for the USA. Some policy implications
are drawn for the Eurozone.The stability of inflation differentials is an important condition for the smooth working of a currency area, such as the European Economic and Monetary Union. In the presence of stability, changes in national inflation rates, while holding Euro-area inflation fixed contemporaneously, should be only transitory. If this is the case, the rate of inflation of the whole area can also be interpreted as a predictor, at least in the long run, of the different national inflation rates. However, in this paper we show that this condition is satisfied only for a small number of countries, including France and Italy. Better convergence results for inflation differentials are, instead, found for the USA. Some policy implications are drawn for the Eurozone
Measuring the Effects of Oil Price and Euro-area Shocks on CEECs Business Cycles
This paper aims to assess the effects of external macroeconomic shocks on business cycles of Central and Eastern European Countries, not yet Euro-area members. Using quarterly data from 1999 to 2015 and the structural near-VAR methodology, we focus on the effects of Euro-area monetary policy and global oil price shocks on prices and output of the analyzed countries. Results show that business cycle fluctuations are mainly explained by domestic shocks in the short run, while monetary policy and oil price shocks play an increasing role in the medium run. Adding domestic fiscal shocks the overall picture does not change significantly, since fiscal policy turns out to be a minor driver of business cycle fluctuations in CEECs
Measuring the Effects of Oil Price and Euro-area Shocks on CEECs Business Cycles
This paper aims to assess the effects of external macroeconomic shocks on business cycles of Central and Eastern European Countries, not yet Euro-area members. Using quarterly
data from 1999 to 2015 and the structural near-VAR methodology, we focus on the effects of
Euro-area monetary policy and global oil price shocks on prices and output of the analyzed
countries. Results show that business cycle fluctuations are mainly explained by domestic
shocks in the short run, while monetary policy and oil price shocks play an increasing role
in the medium run. Adding domestic fiscal shocks the overall picture does not change significantly, since fiscal policy turns out to be a minor driver of business cycle fluctuations in
CEECs
- …