Does Inflation Harm Economic Growth? Evidence for the OECD
Author(s) -
Javier Andrés,
Ignacio Hernando
Publication year - 1997
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.3386/w6062
Subject(s) - harm , inflation (cosmology) , economics , do no harm , monetary economics , psychology , criminology , social psychology , physics , theoretical physics
The purpose of this paper is to study the correlation among growth and inflation at the OECD level, within the framework of the so-called convergence equations, and to discuss whether this correlation withstands a number of improvements in the empirical models, which try to address the most common criticisms of this evidence. The main findings are the following: 1) the negative correlation among growth and inflation is not explained by the experience of high-inflation economies; 2) the estimated costs of inflation are still significant once country-specific effects are allowed for in the empirical model; and 3) the observed correlation cannot be dismissed on the grounds of reverse causation (from GDP to inflation).
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