Abstract
Neo-Fisherism, the theory that monetary authorities should expect inflation rates to be positively and causally related to their targeted nominal interest rates, is reviewed and empirically investigated. Using several different measures of interest rates and inflation we analyze US monthly data from January 1964 to April 2019. Granger causality tests are performed in search of a Neo-Fisherist impact of interest rates causally impacting inflation or the reverse. The full period is reviewed and is also divided into three sub-periods: the period before the Federal Reserve targeted federal funds rate at 25 basis points (labeled here as the effective lower bound, ELB), the ELB period, and the post-ELB period. Prior to the effective lower bound, we find evidence largely supporting the classical view of causality from inflation to interest rates, however the relationship is bidirectional depending on the measurement of inflation and interest rates. During the ELB, we find moderate evidence in support of Neo-Fisherism. In this period, federal funds rate Granger-cause changes in inflation as measured using the CPI and Core CPI. In contrast, during the effective lower bound period, the standard classical result holds when considering the Shadow federal funds rate. In the period following the effective lower bound, the standard relationship is found as well, in which inflation granger causes movements in the interest rates. Overall, the results regarding causality between interest rates and inflation largely support the classical view of causality but are dependent on data measurements and the observed time period.
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- Evaluating Changes in the Transmission Mechanism of Government Spending Shocks
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Articles in the same Issue
- Contributions
- Quantifying the Effects of Patent Protection on Innovation, Imitation, Growth, and Aggregate Productivity
- Sectoral Productivity Gaps and Aggregate Productivity
- Optimal Industrial Policies in a Two-Sector-R&D Economy
- Entry Costs, Task Variety, and Skill Flexibility: A Simple Theory of (Top) Income Skewness
- Leaning-Against-the-Wind: Which Policy and When?
- Tax Policy and Toxic Housing Bubbles in China
- The Cyclicality of On-the-Job Search Effort
- A Test of Neo-Fisherism: 1964–2019
- Advances
- Evaluating Changes in the Transmission Mechanism of Government Spending Shocks
- Contributions
- On the Limits of Macroprudential Policy
- Robust Monetary Policy Under Uncertainty About the Lower Bound
- Monetary Policy and Cross-Border Interbank Market Fragmentation: Lessons from the Crisis
- International Welfare Spillovers of National Pension Schemes