CAUSES OF FAILURE OF THE PHILLIPS CURVE: DOES TRANQUILLITY OF ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT MATTER?
Sažetak
Although empirical literature regarding the Phillips curve is sizeable enough, there is still no wide consensus on its validity and stability. The literature shows that the Phillips relationship is fragile and varies across countries and time periods; a statistical relationship that appears strong during one decade (country) may be weak the next (other). This variability might have some grounds for idiosyncrasy of a country and its economic environment. To address it, this paper scrutinizes the Phillips relationship over 41 countries over the period 1980-2016, paying attention to how inflation dynamics behave during tranquil and recessionary periods. As a result, the paper confirms the variability of the Phillips relationship across countries, as well as time periods. It documents that the relationship holds in the majority of developed countries, while it fails to hold in emerging and frontier economies during tranquil periods. On the other hand, the relationship totally collapses during recessionary periods, even in developed markets. This shows that tranquillity of economic environment is significantly important for the Phillip trade-off to work smoothly. Moreover, both backward- and forward-looking fractions of inflation remarkably increase during recessionary periods as a result of the Phillips coefficient loses its significance within the model. This indicates that markets become more inflation-sensitive during these periods.
Reference
Ball, L., and Mazumder, S. (2011). Inflation Dynamics and the Great Recession.IMF Working Paper No: 11/121.
Ball, L., and Mazumder, S. (2015). A Phillips Curve with Anchored Expectations and Short-Term Unemployment. IMF Working Paper No: 15/39.
Bernanke, B. (2010). The Economic Outlook and Monetary Policy. Speech delivered at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Economic Symposium, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, 27 August.
Clerc, L., Dellas, H., and Loisel, O. (2010). To be or not to be in monetary union: A synthesis. Banque de France, Working Paper Series No: 30.
Coibion, O., and Gorodnichenko, Y. (2015).Is the Phillips Curve Alive and Well after All?Inflation Expectations and the Missing Disinflation. American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 7(1): 197–232.
Daly, M., Hobijn, B., and Lucking, B. (2012). Why Has Wage Growth Stayed Strong? Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Economic Letter, 2012–10.
Del Boca, A., Fratianni, M., Spinelli, F., and Trecroci, C. (2010).The Phillips curve and the Italian lira, 1861–1998. North American Journal of Economics and Finance, 21, 182–197.
Doser, A., Nunes, R., Rao, N., and Sheremirov, V. (2017).Inflation Expectations and Nonlinearities in the Phillips Curve. Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, WP No.17-11.
Fendel, R., Lis, E.M., and Rulke, J.C. (2011). Do Professional Forecasters Believe in the Phillips Curve? Evidence from the G7 Countries.Journal of Forecasting, 30, 268-287.
Friedman, M. (1968).The Role of Monetary Policy.American Economic Review, 58(1), 1–17.
Friedrich, C. (2016). Global inflation dynamics in the post-crisis period: What explains the puzzles? Economics Letters, 142(2), 31–34.
Hall, R.E. (2011). The long slump. American Economic Review, 101(2), 431–69.
Hodrick, R.J., and Prescott, E.C. (1997). Postwar U.S. Business Cycles: an Empirical Investigation. Journal of Money Credit and Banking, 29(1), 1–16.
International Monetary Fund (IMF). (2013). The Dog That Didn’t Bark: Has Inflation Been Muzzled or Was It Just Sleeping? In World Economic Outlook, 79–96. Washington, DC, April.
Karan Singh, B., Kanakaraj, A., and Sridevi, T.O. (2011).Revisiting the empirical existence of the Phillips curve for India.Journal of Asian Economics, 22, 247–258.
Lucas, R. (1976). Econometric Policy Evaluation: A Critique. In The Phillips Curve and Labor Markets. Edited by Brunner, K. and Meltzer, A. Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 1. New York: American Elsevier, 19-46.
Murphy, A. (2018). The Death of the Phillips Curve? Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Research Department, Working Paper 1801, https://doi.org/10.24149/wp1801
Nub, P. (2013).An Empirical Analysis of the Phillips Curve: A Time Series Exploration of Germany.Thesis.Linnaeus University.
Ojapinwa, T.V., and Esan, F. (2013). Does Philips Relations Really Exist in Nigeria? Empirical Evidence.International Journal of Economics and Finance, 5(9), 123-133.
Paul, B.P. (2009). In search of the Phillips curve for India.Journal of Asian Economics, 20(4), 479-488.
Phelps, E. (1967). Phillips Curves, Expectations of Inflation and Optimal Unemployment over Time. Economica, 34(135), 254-281.
Phillips, A.W. (1958). The Relationship between Unemployment and the Rate of Change of Money Wage in the United Kingdom 1861-1957. Economica, 25(100), 283-299.
Ravn, M.O., and Uhlig, H. (2002). Notes on Adjusting the Hodrick-Prescott Filter for the Frequency of Observations. The Review of Economics and Statistics, 84(2), 371-380.
Russel, B., and Banerjee, A. (2008).The Long-run Phillips Curve and Non-stationary Inflation.Journal of Macroeconomics, 30(4), 1792-1815.
Samuelson, P.A., and Solow, R.M. (1960).Analytical Aspects of Anti-inflation Policy.American Economic Review, 50(2), 177-194.
Simionescu, M. (2014).Testing the Existence and Stability of Phillips Curve in Romania.Montenegrin Journal of Economics, 10(1), 67-74.
Sovbetov, Y., and Kaplan, M. (2019).Empirical Examination of Stability of Neo-Classical Phillips Curve since 1980. Theoretical and Applied Economics, (forthcoming).
Wimanda, R.E., Turner, P.M., and Hall, M.J.B. (2013).The shape of the Phillips curve: The case of Indonesia. Applied Economics, 45, 4114–4121.