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Working Paper 95-6
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
Revised article published in Journal of Money, Credit
and Banking 29, no. 3 (August 1997): 338-50. Reproduced
here with permission from the Ohio State University
Press.
The seminal work of Phelps, Taylor, and Calvo developed
forward-looking models of price determination that imparted
inertia to the price level. These models incorporate
expectations of future prices and excess demand by imposing
constraints (typically lag-lead symmetry constraints)
that force future variables to enter the specification.
In this paper, I test the empirical significance of
future prices in specifications like those of Taylor.
I find that expectations of future prices are empirically
unimportant in explaining price and inflation behavior.
However, the dynamics of a model that includes a purely
backward-looking inflation specification differ significantly-and
not altogether pleasingly-from those with a forward-looking
specification.
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