Inflation targets and endogenous wage markups in a New Keynesian model
Empirical contributions show that wage re-negotiations take place while expiring contracts are still in place. This is captured by assuming that nominal wages are pre-determined. As a consequence, wage setters act as Stackelberg leaders, whereas in the typical New Keynesian model the wage-setting rule implies that they play a Nash game. We present a DSGE New Keynesian model with pre-determined wages and money entering the representative household's utility function and show how these assumptions are sufficient to identify an inverse relationship between the inflation target and the wage markup (and thus employment) both in the short and the long run. This is due to the complementary effects that wage claims and the inflation target have on money holdings. Model estimates suggest that a moderate long-run inflation rate generates non-negligible output gains.
Year of publication: |
2011-10
|
---|---|
Authors: | Giovanni, Di Bartolomeo ; Patrizio, Tirelli ; Nicola, Acocella |
Institutions: | Department of Communication, University of Teramo |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The macroeconomics of social pacts
Nicola, Acocella, (2007)
-
Trend inflation as a workers disciplining device in a general equilibrium model
Giovanni, Di Bartolomeo, (2008)
-
Trend inflation, the labor market wedge, and the non-vertical Phillips curve
Giovanni, Di Bartolomeo, (2011)
- More ...