The Great inflation of the 1970s

Date

2007

Authors

Collard, F.
Dellas, H.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 2007; 39(2-3):713-731

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

The two leading explanations for the poor inflation performance during the 1970s are policy opportunism (Barro and Gordon 1983) and “inadvertently” bad monetary policy (Clarida, Gali, and Gertler 2000, Orphanides 2003). The main models of the latter category are that of Orphanides (loose monetary policy was the outcome of mis-perceptions about potential output rather than of inflation tolerance) and of Clarida, Gali, and Gertler (weak policy reaction to expected inflation led to indeterminacies). We show that both of these models can account for high and persistent inflation and also have satisfactory overall performance if an exceptionally large decrease in productivity took place at that time.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record