A time-varying approach of the US welfare cost of inflation

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Authors

Miller, Stephen M.
Martins, Luis Filipe
Gupta, Rangan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Abstract

Money-demand specifications exhibit instability, especially for long spans of data. This paper reconsiders the welfare cost of inflation for the US economy using a flexible time-varying (TV) cointegration methodology to estimate the money-demand function. We find evidence that the TV cointegration estimation provides a better fit of the actual data than a time-invariant estimation and that the throughout unitary income elasticity only exists for the log–log form over the entire sample period. Our estimate of the welfare cost of inflation for a 10% inflation rate lies in the range of 0.025–0.75% of gross domestic product (GDP) and averages 0.27%. In sum, our findings fall well within the ranges of existing studies of the welfare cost of inflation. We find that the welfare cost averages 7.4% higher during expansions than recessions for 10% inflation rate. Finally, the interest elasticity of money demand shows substantial variability over our sample period.

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Keywords

Money demand, Curvature, Monetary policy, Cointegration, Endogenous growth (Economics), United States (US), Error correction, Welfare cost of inflation, Time-varying cointegration

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Citation

Miller, S.M., Martins, L.F. & Gupta, R. 2019, 'A time-varying approach of the US welfare cost of inflation', Macroeconomic Dynamics, vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 775-797.