How much of the recent inflation was caused by deficits?

 [[{“value”:”This paper measures the causal effect of deficits on inflation using a “high frequency narrative approach”. We identify an event that released news about the 2021 deficits in the United States—the Georgia Senate election runoff. We calculate the size of the shock using new narrative data from investment banks. We then study the high frequency
The post How much of the recent inflation was caused by deficits? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.”}]] 

This paper measures the causal effect of deficits on inflation using a “high frequency narrative approach”. We identify an event that released news about the 2021 deficits in the United States—the Georgia Senate election runoff. We calculate the size of the shock using new narrative data from investment banks. We then study the high frequency response of inflation forecasts from asset prices, in order to separate deficits from other factors affecting inflation. We estimate an “inflation multiplier” of 0.18% price level growth over two years, for a 1% deficit-to-GDP shock. Our estimate implies that the 2021 deficits caused around 30% of the 2021-22 inflation—meaning deficits were important but not the only cause. A standard heterogeneous agent New Keynesian model quantitatively matches the size and dynamics inflation multiplier.

That is from a new paper by Jonathon Hazell and Stepan Hobler.

The post How much of the recent inflation was caused by deficits? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

 Economics, Uncategorized 


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *