Volume 2, Issue 1 March 2006

The Persistence of Inflation in OECD Countries: A Fractionally Integrated Approach

Abstract

The statistical properties of inflation and, in particular, its degree of persistence and stability over time is a subject of intense debate, and no consensus has been achieved yet. The goal of this paper is to analyze this controversy using a general approach, with the aim of providing a plausible explanation for the existing contradictory results. We consider the inflation rates of twenty-one OECD countries which are modeled as fractionally integrated (FI) processes. First, we show analytically that FI can appear in inflation rates after aggregating individual prices from firms that face different costs of adjusting their prices. Then, we provide robust empirical evidence supporting the FI hypothesis using both classical and Bayesian techniques. Next, we estimate impulse response functions and other scalar measures of persistence, achieving an accurate picture of this property and its variation across countries. It is shown that the application of some popular tools for measuring persistence, such as the sum of the AR coefficients, could lead to erroneous conclusions if fractional integration is present. Finally, we explore the existence of changes in inflation inertia using a novel approach. We conclude that the persistence of inflation is very high (although nonpermanent) in most postindustrial countries and that it has remained basically unchanged over the last four decades.

Authors

  • María Dolores Gadea
  • Laura Mayoral

JEL codes

  • C22
  • E31

Other papers in this issue

Naohiko Baba and Motoharu Nakashima and Yosuke Shigemi and Kazuo Ueda

Helmut Elsinger and Alfred Lehar and Martin Summer

Prasanna Gai and Nicholas Vause

Christopher J Erceg and Luca Guerrieri and Christopher Gust

Naohiko Baba and Motoharu Nakashima and Yosuke Shigemi and Kazuo Ueda

Helmut Elsinger and Alfred Lehar and Martin Summer

Prasanna Gai and Nicholas Vause

Christopher J. Erceg and Luca Guerrieri and Christopher Gust