Working paper/research report

The role of global and domestic shocks for inflation dynamics: Evidence from Asia


Authors listFinck, David; Tillmann, Peter

Publication year2019

URLhttps://hdl.handle.net/10419/200667

Title of seriesMAGKS Joint discussion paper series in economics

Number in series2019, 04


Abstract

This paper studies the determinants of business cycles in small open economies and adds to the discussion about the changing nature of inflation dynamics. We estimate a series of VAR models for a set of six Asian emerging market economies, in which we identify a battery of domestic and global shocks using sign restrictions. We find that global shocks explain large parts of inflation and output dynamics. The global shocks are procyclical with respect to the domestic components of economic activity. We estimate Phillips curve regressions based on alternative decompositions of output into global and domestic components. For the domestic component of GDP we find a positive and significant Phillips curve slope. While the output component driven by oil prices "flattens" the Phillips curve, the component driven by global demand shocks "steepens" the trade-off. Hence, whether or not global shocks flatten the Phillips curve crucially depends on the nature of these global shocks. A series of counterfactuals supports these findings and suggests that the role of monetary policy and exchange rate shocks is limited.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleFinck, D. and Tillmann, P. (2019) The role of global and domestic shocks for inflation dynamics: Evidence from Asia. (MAGKS Joint discussion paper series in economics, 2019, 04). Marburg: Philipps-University Marburg. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/200667

APA Citation styleFinck, D., & Tillmann, P. (2019). The role of global and domestic shocks for inflation dynamics: Evidence from Asia. (MAGKS Joint discussion paper series in economics, 2019, 04). Philipps-University Marburg. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/200667


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 17:17