A time-varying approach of the US welfare cost of inflation
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Date
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.
Description
Keywords
Money demand, Curvature, Monetary policy, Cointegration, Endogenous growth (Economics), United States (US), Error correction, Welfare cost of inflation, Time-varying cointegration
Sustainable Development Goals
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.