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Implications of food subsistence for monetary policy and inflation
Author(s) -
Rafael Portillo,
LuisFelipe Zanna,
Stephen A. O’Connell,
Richard M. Peck
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
oxford economic papers
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.68
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 1464-3812
pISSN - 0030-7653
DOI - 10.1093/oep/gpw017
Subject(s) - subsistence agriculture , economics , monetary policy , inflation (cosmology) , welfare , monetary economics , food prices , new keynesian economics , inflation targeting , consumption (sociology) , macroeconomics , food security , ecology , agriculture , market economy , biology , social science , physics , sociology , theoretical physics
We introduce subsistence requirements in food consumption into a simple new-Keynesian model with flexible food and sticky non-food prices. We study how the endogenous structural transformation that results from subsistence affects the dynamics of the economy, the design of monetary policy, and the properties of inflation at different levels of development. A\ calibrated version of the model encompasses both rich and poor countries and broadly replicates the properties of inflation across the development spectrum, including the dominant role played by changes in the relative price of food in poor countries. We derive a welfare-based loss function for the monetary authority and show that optimal policy calls for complete (in some cases near-complete) stabilization of sticky-price non-food inflation, despite the presence of a food-subsistence threshold. Subsistence amplifies the welfare losses of policy mistakes, however, raising the stakes for monetary policy at earlier stages of development.

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