A new look at historical monetary policy (and the great inflation) through the lens of a persistence-dependent policy rule

Author:

Ashley Richard1,Tsang Kwok Ping2,Verbrugge Randal3

Affiliation:

1. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, U.S.A.; e-mail: ashleyr@vt.edu

2. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, U.S.A.; e-mail: byront@vt.edu

3. Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Cleveland, U.S.A

Abstract

Abstract The origins of the Great Inflation, a central 20th-century U.S. macroeconomic event, remain contested. Prominent explanations are poor inflation forecasts or inaccurate output gap measurement. An alternative view is that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) was unwilling to fight inflation, perhaps due to political pressures. Here, we sort this out via a novel econometric approach, disaggregating the real-time unemployment and inflation time series entering the FOMC historical policy reaction-function into persistence components, using one-sided Fourier filtering; this implicitly estimates the unemployment gap in actual use. We find compelling evidence for (economically interpretable) persistence-dependence in both variables. Furthermore, our results support the “unwilling to fight” view: the FOMC’s unemployment gap responses were essentially unchanged pre- and post-Volcker, while its inflation responses sharpened markedly starting with Volcker.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

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