COWLES FOUNDATION FOR RESEARCH IN
ECONOMICS
AT YALE UNIVERSITY
Post Office Box 208281
New Haven, CT 06520-8281

COWLES FOUNDATION DISCUSSION PAPER NO. 1300
On Modeling the Effects of Inflation Shocks
Ray C. Fair
Cowles Foundation, Yale University
April 2001
Revised March 2002
A
popular model in the literature postulates an interest rate rule, a NAIRU price equation,
and an aggregate demand equation in which aggregate demand depends on the real interest
rate. In this model a positive inflation shock with the nominal interest rate held
constant is explosive because it increases aggregate demand (because the real interest
rate is lower), which increases inflation through the price equation, which further
increases aggregate demand, and so on. In order for the model to be stable, the nominal
interest rate must rise more than inflation, which means that the coefficient on inflation
in the interest rate rule must be greater than one.
The
results in this paper suggest, however, that an inflation shock with the nominal interest
rate held constant has a negative effect on real output. There are three reasons. First,
the data support the use of nominal rather than real interest rates in aggregate
expenditure equations. Second, the evidence suggests that the percentage increase in
nominal household wealth from a positive inflation shock is less than the percentage
increase in the price level, which is contractionary because of the fall in real wealth.
Third, there is evidence that wages lag prices, and so a positive inflation shock results
in an initial fall in real wage rates and thus real labor income, which is contractionary.
If these three features are true, they imply that a positive inflation shock has a
negative effect on aggregate demand even if the nominal interest rate is held constant.
Not only does the Fed not have to increase the nominal interest rate more than the
increase in inflation for there to be a contraction, it does not have to increase the
nominal rate at all!
Keywords: Macroeconomics, monetary policy
JEL Classification: E1, E5
Old title: Is There Empirical Support for the 'Modern' View of
Macroeconomics |