|
UCSC Econ Papers
UCSC Econ Website
Search UCSC Econ
Notify me of new papers
|
 |

Do High Oil Prices Presage Inflation? The Evidence from G-5 Countries
Michael LeBlanc, Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture
Menzie David Chinn, University of Wisconsin, Madison
ABSTRACT: We estimate the effects of oil price changes on inflation for the United States, United
Kingdom, France, Germany, and Japan using an augmented Phillips curve framework. We
supplement the traditional Phillips curve approach taking into account the growing body of
evidence suggesting that oil prices may have asymmetric and nonlinear effects on output and that
structural instabilities may exist in those relationships. Our statistical estimates suggest current
oil price increases are likely to have only a modest effect on inflation in the U.S, Japan, and
Europe. Oil price increases of as much as 10 percentage points will lead to direct inflationary
increases of about 0.1-0.8 percentage points in the U.S. and the E.U. Inflation in Europe,
traditionally thought to be more sensitive to oil prices than in the U.S., is unlikely to show any
significant difference in sensitivity from that in the United States and in fact may be less in some
countries.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Michael LeBlanc and Menzie David Chinn,
"Do High Oil Prices Presage Inflation? The Evidence from G-5 Countries"
(February 19, 2004).
Department of Economics, UCSC.
Paper 561.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucscecon/561
|