This paper reports on research into the negative relationship between inflation and the markup. It is argued that this relationship can be thought of as ‘long-run’ in nature which suggests that inflation has a persistent effect on the markup and, therefore, the real wage. A ‘rule of thumb’ from the estimates indicate that a 10 percentage point increase in inflation (as occurred worldwide in the 1970s) is associated with around a 7 per cent fall in the markup accompanied by a similar increase in the real wage. It is argued that movements of this magnitude in the markup and the real wage will have important implications for a range of economic outcomes such as unemployment, employment and investment
‘Modern’ Phillips curve theories predict inflation is an integrated, or near integrated, process. Ho...
This paper estimates a variety of models of inflation using quarterly data for the UK between 1965 ...
An I(2) analysis of Australian inflation and the markup is undertaken within an imperfect competitio...
This paper reports on research into the negative relationship between inflation and the markup. It i...
Theoretical models of the markup-inflation relationship focus on the markup of price on marginal cos...
An I(2) analysis of Australian inflation and the markup is undertaken within an imperfect competitio...
An I(2) analysis of inflation and the markup is undertaken for the G7 economies and Australia. We fi...
Using annual US data for gross domestic product originating by sector between 1947 and 1997 it is sh...
This paper links two existing but separate literatures. Measures of the markup, inflation and relati...
In this note we use the methodology of Banerjee, Cockerell and Russell (2001) and Banerjee and Russe...
United States Phillips curves are routinely estimated without accounting for the shifts in mean infl...
‘Modern’ theories of the Phillips curve inadvertently imply that inflation is anintegrated or near i...
‘Modern’ theories of the Phillips curve imply that inflation is an integrated, or near integrated’ p...
This paper argues that because United States inflation has been nonstationary over the past 5 decade...
‘Modern’ Phillips curve theories predict inflation is an integrated, or near integrated, process. Ho...
This paper estimates a variety of models of inflation using quarterly data for the UK between 1965 ...
An I(2) analysis of Australian inflation and the markup is undertaken within an imperfect competitio...
This paper reports on research into the negative relationship between inflation and the markup. It i...
Theoretical models of the markup-inflation relationship focus on the markup of price on marginal cos...
An I(2) analysis of Australian inflation and the markup is undertaken within an imperfect competitio...
An I(2) analysis of inflation and the markup is undertaken for the G7 economies and Australia. We fi...
Using annual US data for gross domestic product originating by sector between 1947 and 1997 it is sh...
This paper links two existing but separate literatures. Measures of the markup, inflation and relati...
In this note we use the methodology of Banerjee, Cockerell and Russell (2001) and Banerjee and Russe...
United States Phillips curves are routinely estimated without accounting for the shifts in mean infl...
‘Modern’ theories of the Phillips curve inadvertently imply that inflation is anintegrated or near i...
‘Modern’ theories of the Phillips curve imply that inflation is an integrated, or near integrated’ p...
This paper argues that because United States inflation has been nonstationary over the past 5 decade...
‘Modern’ Phillips curve theories predict inflation is an integrated, or near integrated, process. Ho...
This paper estimates a variety of models of inflation using quarterly data for the UK between 1965 ...
An I(2) analysis of Australian inflation and the markup is undertaken within an imperfect competitio...