Inflation Dynamics and the Hybrid Neo Keynesian Phillips Curve: The Case of Chile

Produced by: 
Munich Personal RePEc Archive
Available from: 
March 2015
Paper author(s): 
Carlos Medel (University of Nottingham, United Kingdom)
Topic: 
Financial Economics
Theory
Year: 
2015

It is recognised that the understanding and accurate forecasts of key macroeconomic variables are fundamental for the success of any economic policy. In the case of monetary policy, many efforts have been made towards understanding the relationship between past and expected values of inflation, resulting in the so-called Hybrid Neo-Keynesian Phillips Curve (HNKPC). In this article I investigate to which extent the HNKPC help to explain inflation dynamics as well as its out-of-sample forecast, for the case of the Chilean economy. The results show that the forward-looking component is significative and accounts from 1.58 to 0.40 times the lagged inflation coefficient. Also, I find predictive gains close to 45% (respect to a backward-looking specification) and up to 80% (respect to the random walk) when forecasting at 12-months ahead.

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