The Monthly Measurement of Core Inflation in Japan
This paper considers the use of trimmed means as monthly indicators of Japanese core inflation. As in Bryan, Cecchetti, and Wiggins (1997) for the United States, and Roger (1997) for New Zealand, we find that trimming the tails of the price change distribution substantially improves high-frequency estimates of Japanese core inflation. These estimators yield efficiency gains of roughly two-thirds over the Japanese CPI. While we find that trimming approximately 35 percent from each tail of the price change distribution produces the most efficient monthly estimator over the full 27-year period, a range of trimmed-mean estimators (between 21 percent and the median price change) provide nearly the same signal. Moreover, we find that these estimators are superior to the standard monthly core inflation estimator in Japan, the CPI less fresh food. At lower frequencies (12-month percent changes and beyond), the differences between the candidate estimators were found to be small, and the trimmed estimators were nearly the same as the CPI less fresh food and energy along many dimensions.
Year of publication: |
1999
|
---|---|
Authors: | Bryan, Michael-F ; Cecchetti, Stephen-G |
Published in: |
Monetary and Economic Studies. - Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies. - Vol. 17.1999, 1, p. 77-101
|
Publisher: |
Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
A behaviour-based approach to the estimation of poverty in India
Almås, Ingvild, (2013)
-
The analytics of New Keynesian Phillips curves
Maußner, Alfred, (2010)
-
The Fisher Relation in the Great Depression and the Great Recession
Laidler, David, (2013)
- More ...