2023
DOI: 10.1002/jae.2963
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Inflation expectations and nonlinearities in the Phillips curve

Abstract: This paper shows that a simple form of nonlinearity in the Phillips curve can explain why, following the Great Recession, inflation did not decrease as much as predicted by linear Phillips curves, a phenomenon known as the missing disinflation. We estimate a piecewise-linear specification and document that the data favor a model with two regions, with the response of inflation to an increase in unemployment slower in the region where unemployment is already high. Nonlinearities remain important, even when we a… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Nalewaik (2016) explored the same investigation using the Markov-switching regime technique and discovered that the economy experiences increasing inflation as the labour market becomes tightened beyond a certain threshold. Similarly, Doser et al . (2017) also deployed threshold regression for their investigation and revealed a strong negative relationship between the variables when the labour market is tightened but weak negative nexus as the labour market loosens.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Nalewaik (2016) explored the same investigation using the Markov-switching regime technique and discovered that the economy experiences increasing inflation as the labour market becomes tightened beyond a certain threshold. Similarly, Doser et al . (2017) also deployed threshold regression for their investigation and revealed a strong negative relationship between the variables when the labour market is tightened but weak negative nexus as the labour market loosens.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 68%