The non-linear response of US state-level tradable and non-tradable inflation to oil shocks : the role of oil-dependence
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Date
Authors
Sheng, Xin
Marfatia, Hardik A.
Gupta, Rangan
Ji, Qiang
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
This paper investigates the effects of oil supply, oil-specific consumption demand, oil inventory demand shocks, and global economic activity shocks on state-level tradable and non-tradable inflation in the US. We use oil shock data following the work of Baumeister and Hamilton (2019) and estimate both linear and non-linear impulse responses using a lag-augmented local projections model in a panel context. Our results from a linear model show that both supply and demand-side oil shocks have a statistically significant impact on both types of inflation. While supply, global economic activity, and demand shocks have a greater impact on tradable inflation, non-tradable inflation responds more strongly to inventory shocks. Further, the non-linear model results provide evidence of heterogeneity in the magnitude and persistence of impact between high- and low-oil dependence regimes. Non-tradable inflation is more sensitive to nearly all components of oil price shocks in the high-oil dependence regime.
Description
Keywords
Phillips curve, Structural oil shocks, State-level inflation, Local projection method
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Sheng, X., Marfatia, H.A., Gupta, R. et al. 2023, 'The non-linear response of US state-level tradable and non-tradable inflation to oil shocks: The role of oil-dependence', Research in International Business and Finance, vol. 64, art. 101830, pp. 1-10, doi : 10.1016/j.ribaf.2022.101830.
