Volume 11, Supplement 1 September 2015

Trend Inflation in Advanced Economies

Abstract

We derive estimates of trend inflation for fourteen advanced economies from a framework in which trend shocks exhibit stochastic volatility. The estimated specification allows for time variation in the degree to which longer-term inflation expectations are well anchored in each economy. Our results bring out the effect of changes in monetary regime (such as the adoption of inflation targeting in several countries) on the behavior of trend inflation. Our estimates represent an expansion of those in the previous literature along several dimensions. For each country, we employ a multivariate approach that pools different inflation series in order to identify their common trend. In addition, our estimates of the inflation gap (that is, the difference between trend and observed inflation) are allowed to exhibit considerable persistence-a treatment that affects the trend estimates to some extent. A forecast evaluation based on quasi-real-time estimates registers sizable improvements in inflation forecasts at different horizons for almost all countries considered. It remains the case, however, that simple random-walk forecasts of inflation are difficult to outperform by a statistically significant amount.

Authors

  • Christine Garnier
  • Elmar Mertens
  • Edward Nelson

JEL codes

  • C53
  • E37
  • E47
  • E58

Other papers in this issue

Matteo Cacciatore and Fabio Ghironi and Stephen J. Turnovsky

Christian Gillitzer and John Simon

Troy Davig and Refet S. Gürkaynak

Güneş Kamber and Özer Karagedikli and Christie Smith

Graeme Wheeler

Lars E.O. Svensson