Globalization, the output-inflation tradeoff and inflation
This paper provides comprehensive evidence on the relation between inflation and globalization, defined here as trade and financial openness, using a large cross-section of 91 countries over the period 1985-2004. We establish two main empirical regularities: both higher trade and financial openness (i) reduce central banks' inflation bias, yielding lower average inflation and (ii) are associated with a larger output-inflation tradeoff. This evidence is at odds with the standard Barro-Gordon framework, which would require globalization to have a negative effect on the output-inflation tradeoff to yield lower equilibrium inflation, but it is consistent with a recent strand of new Keynesian models emphasizing the role of imperfect competition and nominal rigidities. Our findings also support the relevance of the time-inconsistency hypothesis, which underlies the theoretical models predicting a relation between globalization and inflation. For the OECD subsample, however, we do not find an effect of openness on inflation (the output-inflation tradeoff), suggesting that these countries have created an institutional framework for central banks that eliminates distortions due to the time-inconsistency problem.
Year of publication: |
2009
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---|---|
Authors: | Badinger, Harald |
Published in: |
European Economic Review. - Elsevier, ISSN 0014-2921. - Vol. 53.2009, 8, p. 888-907
|
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Subject: | Globalization Trade Financial Openness Inflation |
Saved in:
Online Resource
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