There is a growing consensus on the existence of a positive, long-run relation between inflation and unemployment in the US economy. However, the conclusion that the two variables move in the same direction at low frequencies leaves open the question of the identification of the factors - real or, alternatively, monetary - underlying this co-movement. In this paper we try to shed light on this question by adopting a structural VAR agnostic approach. The main conclusion is that in the postwar US economy an important role has been played by supply shocks in shaping the long-run evolution of unemployment. Thus, it seems that this evidence is at odds with purely monetary explanation of the co-movement between inflation and unemployment
The paper critically examines the New Keynesian explanation of hysteresis based on the role of long-...
This paper addresses the various methodological issues surrounding vector autoregressions, simultane...
This paper presents a new empirical regularity between the volatility of productivity growth and lon...
There is a growing consensus on the existence of a positive, long-run relation between inflation and...
We examine the relationship between inflation and unemployment in the long run, using quarterly US d...
We study the long-run relation between money, measured by inflation or interest rates, and unemploym...
In recent years growing attention has been paid to the dynamic interaction between productivity gro...
In this paper a brief history of the Phillips curve is sketched. Empirical evidence from France, Ger...
The aim of this study is to investigate both the short-run and long-run relationship between inflati...
In this paper, by using a combination of long-run and short-run restrictions, we identify a small st...
We examine the relationship between inflation and unemployment in the long run, using quarterly US d...
Conventional wisdom holds that, in the long run, the Phillips curve is vertical. We re-examine the r...
This paper addresses the various methodological issues surrounding vector autoregressions, simultane...
The conventional wisdom that inflation and unemployment are unrelated in the long-run implies that t...
A presentation of a sectoral-shifts model with money that explains the short-run Phillips curve and ...
The paper critically examines the New Keynesian explanation of hysteresis based on the role of long-...
This paper addresses the various methodological issues surrounding vector autoregressions, simultane...
This paper presents a new empirical regularity between the volatility of productivity growth and lon...
There is a growing consensus on the existence of a positive, long-run relation between inflation and...
We examine the relationship between inflation and unemployment in the long run, using quarterly US d...
We study the long-run relation between money, measured by inflation or interest rates, and unemploym...
In recent years growing attention has been paid to the dynamic interaction between productivity gro...
In this paper a brief history of the Phillips curve is sketched. Empirical evidence from France, Ger...
The aim of this study is to investigate both the short-run and long-run relationship between inflati...
In this paper, by using a combination of long-run and short-run restrictions, we identify a small st...
We examine the relationship between inflation and unemployment in the long run, using quarterly US d...
Conventional wisdom holds that, in the long run, the Phillips curve is vertical. We re-examine the r...
This paper addresses the various methodological issues surrounding vector autoregressions, simultane...
The conventional wisdom that inflation and unemployment are unrelated in the long-run implies that t...
A presentation of a sectoral-shifts model with money that explains the short-run Phillips curve and ...
The paper critically examines the New Keynesian explanation of hysteresis based on the role of long-...
This paper addresses the various methodological issues surrounding vector autoregressions, simultane...
This paper presents a new empirical regularity between the volatility of productivity growth and lon...