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Price Flexibility and Output « Persistence » in the Postwar U.S.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2016
Extract
A great deal of evidence for the U.S. economy suggests that after changes in aggregate nominal demand (1) prices move «sluggishly» toward their eventual long-term values, that (2) output responds directly to these changes in demand, and (3) these output effects linger «peristently» over time. Most econometric evidence suggests that something of the order of four to six years must pass before the ultimate effects on prices and output will be reached. As commonly interpreted, this lag has profoundly disturbing implications about the functioning of markets and about the rate of agents’ expectations in macroeconomics.
The conventional interpretation of the output-price adjustment lag -- to borrow the label suggested recently by R.J. Gordon (1982) -- comes unders the « Natural Rate Hypothesis and Gradual Adjustment of Prices » (NRH-GAP) approach. After a change in nominal demand, according to NRH-GAP, some combination of forecast inefficiency and institutional constraints on price setting prevents agents for a time from choosing the set of prices that would clear output markets at the « natural » level. In the meantime and because of this price stickiness aggregate output exhibits persistent deviations from its natural path.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Recherches Économiques de Louvain/ Louvain Economic Review , Volume 49 , Issue 4 , December 1983 , pp. 339 - 356
- Copyright
- Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain, Institut de recherches économiques et sociales 1983
Footnotes
Associate Professor, Queens College, C.U.N.Y. Special thanks to Eric de Souza, Eric Dor, Paul Gerosky, Jacob Grossman, Albert Kervyn, Jean-Pierre Lemaître, Robert Lipsey, Bentley MacLeod and Daniel Weiserbs. This paper was prepared while the author was a visitor at the Institute for Economic Research, Catholic University of Louvain (UCL), Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. I am extremely grateful to Eric Dor, who contributed a great deal of theoretical and computational advice. Errors are mine.