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20th-century Indian economists

For a list of 20th-century Indian economists, click here.

For a list of 20th-century Indian economists, click here.

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Posted by at 10:27 AM

Labels: Profiles of Economists

Is inflation dead?

From a presentation by Surjit S Bhalla:

Some facts to consider about CPI inflation:

  • Inflation in the US averaged 1.9 % between 1996 and 2009; and 70 basis points lower over the next eight years.
  • A little appreciated inflation fact is that the mean inflation rate in 21 Advanced Economies (AE) excluding the US, averaged some 25 bp less than the US.
  • Charts 1 and 2 document median inflation in the Advanced, and the Rest, economies from 1979 to 2017, and 1996 to 2017.
  • Note that inflation decline set in prior to 2007 , and in reality started somewhere in the mid-1990s.”

Explanations for the inflation slowdown:

  • Fiscal deficit trends provide zero clues about this slowdown in inflation.
  • World GDP growth [IMF weights] was the highest 1996-2007.
  • World growth has moved inversely to world inflation.
  • Output gap, or considerations thereof, do not explain, inflation slowdown.
  • Demography (changes in dependency ratio) does explain some of the decline in inflation.
  • However, the most consistent explanation for the decline in inflation is the large increase in college graduates in the Rest of the world compared to such supply in the West (Advanced Economies)”

 

What explains Indian inflation? – Procurement prices and rural wage growth:

  • Procurement prices and rural wage growth matters for Indian inflation, not much else.
  • Further, the impact of procurement prices is diminishing over time, especially over the last three years.
  • Each 1% increase in (lagged) procurement prices leads to a 12 bp increase in inflation.
  • Each 1 % increase in rural wages leads to a 28 bp increase in inflation.
  • The model is able to explain 89 % of the variation in log inflation, 1996-2017.”

In my recent paper with Sangyup Choi, Davide Furceri, Saurabh Mishra, and Marcos Poplawski-Ribeiro, we study the dynamic impact of global oil price shocks on domestic inflation. We find that a 10 percent increase in global oil inflation increases domestic inflation by about 0.4 percentage point on impact, with the effect vanishing after two years and being similar between advanced and developing economies. My paper is available here. The working paper version is available here.

From a presentation by Surjit S Bhalla:

“Some facts to consider about CPI inflation:

  • Inflation in the US averaged 1.9 % between 1996 and 2009; and 70 basis points lower over the next eight years.
  • A little appreciated inflation fact is that the mean inflation rate in 21 Advanced Economies (AE) excluding the US, averaged some 25 bp less than the US.
  • Charts 1 and 2 document median inflation in the Advanced,

Read the full article…

Posted by at 2:19 PM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

Spring 2018 Journal of Economic Perspectives is Online

From a new post by Timothy Taylor:

“I was hired back in 1986 to be the Managing Editor for a new academic economics journal, at the time unnamed, but which soon launched as the Journal of Economic Perspectives. The JEP is published by the American Economic Association, which back in 2011 decided–to my delight–that it would be freely available on-line, from the current issue back to the first issue. Here, I’ll start with Table of Contents for the just-released Spring 2018 issue, which in the Taylor household is known as issue #124. Below that are abstracts and direct links for all of the papers. I will blog more specifically about some of the papers in the next week or two, as well.”

From a new post by Timothy Taylor:

“I was hired back in 1986 to be the Managing Editor for a new academic economics journal, at the time unnamed, but which soon launched as the Journal of Economic Perspectives. The JEP is published by the American Economic Association, which back in 2011 decided–to my delight–that it would be freely available on-line, from the current issue back to the first issue.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 1:15 PM

Labels: Macro Demystified

The IMF’s Fight Against Corruption

From a new post by Frank Vogl:

“The International Monetary Fund is awakening from a long sleep with regard to combating corruption. If the IMF’s new policy announcements are followed by tough action, then the global fight against corruption could make real headway.

The IMF and the world’s leading central banks as well as finance ministries across the globe have been laggards in that fight. They have too often ignored corruption, even when it has been a direct cause of national economic disaster.

For many years, the IMF argued that its charter precludes it from getting involved in politics and that it had to focus exclusively on economics. That was always a lame excuse.

Devoted as it officially is to promoting sustainable economic growth, it has come to the realization that massive income inequality is due in large measure to corruption, as well as direct plunder of state coffers by leading public officials and politicians. Letting that practice fester, however, runs directly counter to achieving sustainable economic growth.

A more intrusive IMF

That is why the IMF’s Board of Directors has now at long last approved an anti-corruption “framework” to guide the work of the Fund’s staff. IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde has issued a clear warning to governments everywhere: “We are going to be more intrusive.”

The last time the Fund firmly challenged a government on the issue of corruption was in the late 1990s when the Asian financial crisis hit. As Indonesia’s economy fell off a cliff, the government of then-president Suharto and the nation’s rotten banking system were in the IMF’s crosshairs.

Thereafter, as Argentina and Greece sought IMF rescue packages, the Fund seemed to have forgotten about corruption. This was all the more perplexing as cheating the national tax collector was a leading popular sport in both countries.”

Continue reading here.

From a new post by Frank Vogl:

“The International Monetary Fund is awakening from a long sleep with regard to combating corruption. If the IMF’s new policy announcements are followed by tough action, then the global fight against corruption could make real headway.

The IMF and the world’s leading central banks as well as finance ministries across the globe have been laggards in that fight.

Read the full article…

Posted by at 8:55 AM

Labels: Inclusive Growth

Housing View – May 4, 2018

On the US:

 

On other countries:

 

Photo by Aliis Sinisalu

On the US:

Read the full article…

Posted by at 5:00 AM

Labels: Global Housing Watch

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