The Slope of the Phillips Curve: Evidence from U.S. States

Author:

Hazell Jonathon1,Herreño Juan2,Nakamura Emi3,Steinsson Jón3

Affiliation:

1. London School of Economics , United Kingdom

2. University of California , San Diego, United States

3. University of California , Berkeley, United States

Abstract

Abstract We estimate the slope of the Phillips curve in the cross section of U.S. states using newly constructed state-level price indices for nontradeable goods back to 1978. Our estimates indicate that the slope of the Phillips curve is small and was small even during the early 1980s. We estimate only a modest decline in the slope of the Phillips curve since the 1980s. We use a multiregion model to infer the slope of the aggregate Phillips curve from our regional estimates. Applying our estimates to recent unemployment dynamics yields essentially no missing disinflation or missing reinflation over the past few business cycles. Our results imply that the sharp drop in core inflation in the early 1980s was mostly due to shifting expectations about long-run monetary policy as opposed to a steep Phillips curve, and the greater stability of inflation between 1990 and 2020 is mostly due to long-run inflation expectations becoming more firmly anchored.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Smith Richardson Foundation

Institute for New Economic Thinking

Julis-Rabinowitz Center for Public Policy and Finance

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference75 articles.

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4. “Forward Guidance without Common Knowledge,”;Angeletos;American Economic Review,2018

5. “Nonlinearities in the Phillips Curve for the United States: Evidence Using Metropolitan Data,”;Babb,2017

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