Sticky Prices and Monetary Policy Shocks
Author(s) -
Mark Bils,
Peter J. Klenow,
Oleksiy Kryvtsov
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
quarterly review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2163-4378
pISSN - 0271-5287
DOI - 10.21034/qr.2711
Subject(s) - monetary policy , monetary economics , economics , keynesian economics , macroeconomics
Models with sticky prices predict that monetary policy changes will affect relative prices and relative quantities in the short run because some prices are more flexible than others. In U.S. micro data, the degree of price stickiness differs dramatically across consumption categories. This study exploits that diversity to ask whether popular measures of monetary shocks (for example, innovations in the federal funds rate) have the predicted effects. The study finds that they do not. Short-run responses of relative prices have the wrong sign. And monetary policy shocks seem to have persistent effects on both relative prices and relative quantities, rather than the transitory effects one would expect from differences in price flexibility across goods. The findings reject the joint hypothesis that the sticky-price models typically employed in policy analysis capture the U.S. economy and that commonly used monetary policy shocks represent exogenous shifts.
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