cover image: The Dominant Role of Expectations and Broad-Based Supply Shocks in Driving Inflation

20.500.12592/9w0w0gd

The Dominant Role of Expectations and Broad-Based Supply Shocks in Driving Inflation

11 Apr 2024

The object of this paper is to assess the role of supply shocks, labour market tightness and expectation formation in explaining bouts of inflation. We begin by showing that a quasi-flat Phillips curve, which was popular prior to the pandemic, still fits the post-2020 US data well and that changes in short term inflation expectations induced by supply shocks likely played a major role in the recent inflation episode. We then document features of the joint dynamics of inflation and inflation expectations. Given the difficulty of reproducing these dynamics under rational expectations, we propose and evaluate a model with imperfect information and bounded rationality. In our model, agents see sectoral inflations as being driven by a component common to all the sectors of the economy and by sector-specific shocks. When supply shocks affect many sectors (what we refer to as a broad-based supply shock), agents infer that the common component of inflation has increased, which drive persistent inflation dynamics through their effect of expectations. We show that departure from full rationality is minor, but that it is enough for broad-based supply shocks to be amplified and propagated over time in a manner needed to explain the data.
business cycles macroeconomics monetary economics economic fluctuations and growth

Authors

Paul Beaudry, Chenyu Hou, Franck Portier

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
Paul Beaudry would like to acknowledge financial support from the Social Science and Research Council of Canada and the University of British Columbia. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w32322
Published in
United States of America

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