Working paper/research report

Local Inflation: Reconsidering the International Comovement of Inflation


Authors listFörster, Marcel; Tillmann, Peter

Publication year2013

URLhttps://hdl.handle.net/10419/73069

Title of seriesMAGKS Joint discussion paper series in economics

Number in series2013, 03


Abstract

In this paper we reconsider the degree of international comovement of inflation rates. We use a dynamic hierarchical factor model that is able to decompose Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation in a panel of countries into (i) a factor common to all inflation series and all countries, (ii) a factor specific to a given sub-section of the CPI, (iii) a country group-factor and (iv) a country-specific component. With its pyramidal structure, the model allows for the possibility that the global factor affects the country-group factor and other subordinated factors but not vice versa. Using quarterly data for industrialized and emerging economies from 1996 to 2011 we find that about two thirds of overall inflation volatility are due to country-specific determinants. For CPI inflation net of food and energy, the global factor and the CPI basketspecific factor account for less than 20% of inflation variation. We argue that local inflation rather than global inflation (Ciccarelli and Mojon (2010)) is a better description of the evidence. Only energy price inflation in industrial economies is dominated by common factors.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleFörster, M. and Tillmann, P. (2013) Local Inflation: Reconsidering the International Comovement of Inflation. (MAGKS Joint discussion paper series in economics, 2013, 03). Marburg: Philipps-University Marburg. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/73069

APA Citation styleFörster, M., & Tillmann, P. (2013). Local Inflation: Reconsidering the International Comovement of Inflation. (MAGKS Joint discussion paper series in economics, 2013, 03). Philipps-University Marburg. https://hdl.handle.net/10419/73069


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 17:18