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Title: The Impact of Inflation Targeting: Testing the Good Luck Hypothesis
Authors: Ravenna, Federico
Keywords: Business cycle shocks
Kalman filter
Credibility
Inflation targeting
Issue Date: 2010-09
Series/Report no.: Cahiers du CIRPÉE;10-29
Abstract: Over the last twenty years the level and volatility of inflation decreased across industrial countries. The inflation stabilization can be explained by a shift in monetary policy or by a lucky period of low volatility in business cycle shocks. To test the “luck hypothesis” we examine the inflation experience of Canada, one of the earliest and most successful adopters of an inflation targeting monetary policy. We Kalman-filter the historical structural shocks consistent with an estimated DSGE model. The estimated shocks are used to build counterfactual histories. Ex-ante the model predicts inflation volatility to more than halve under inflation targeting. But conditional on the shocks, we show that the luck hypothesis can explain with a high probability Canada’s low inflation volatility since the early 1990s. Any inflation stabilization induced by the shift in policy is accounted for the most part by the impact on expectations. Counterfactuals built neglecting expectations would prove the inflation targeting policy irrelevant.
URI: https://depot.erudit.org/id/003228dd
Appears in Collections:Cahiers de recherche du CIRPÉE

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