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Inflation and Business Cycle Convergence in the Euro Area: Empirical Analysis Using an Unobserved Component Model

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-08-21, 08:50 authored by Stephen G. Hall, S. Lagoa
The literature on optimum currency areas states that large inflation differentials can undermine monetary union. In the euro area, inflation rates diverged after the creation of the single currency, but started to converge again from mid-2002. Against this background, we assess the convergence of inflation rates and business cycles and study the relationship between them. The analysis is made using an unobserved component model estimated with the Kalman filter. In general, from 1980 to 2008 inflation rates and business cycles became more aligned in the euro area, but inflation rates converged more quickly than business cycles. The output gap is found to be a better indicator of the business cycle than unit labour cost when studying convergence. By looking at the causality between the convergence of inflation and output gap, it is found that inflation divergence has a limited destabilising economic impact.

History

Citation

Open Economies Review, 2014, 25 (5), pp. 885-908

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Department of Economics

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Open Economies Review

Publisher

Springer Verlag (Germany)

issn

0923-7992

eissn

1573-708X

Copyright date

1007

Available date

2015-08-21

Publisher version

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11079-014-9313-0

Language

en

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