This paper investigates the relationship between nominal interest rates and prices using nearly two centuries of data from ten industrial countries. Both a positive relationship between interest rates and price levels (that is, a positive Gibson effect) and a negative relationship between interest rates and subsequent price changes (that is, a negative Fama-Fisher effect) prevailed until World War I. We propose a simple explanation wherein this doubly paradoxical juxtaposition of effects arises when money is supplied inelastically and prices are flexible. This double paradox disappeared after World War II when economies became mostly characterized by elastic money and sticky prices. During that period, a positive Fama-Fisher effect emerged ...
In this paper, we use new data and modern time series econometrics to reassess the relationship betw...
Fisher’s Price Expectation Effect: an explanatory approach to Gibson’s Paradox? Gibson’s parado...
Gibson paradox remains a puzzle in the discipline of economics. Previous studies attempted to resolv...
This paper adopts a New Keynesian approach to analyze the relationship between nominal interest rate...
We examine the relationship between prices and interest rates for seven advanced economies in the pe...
In this study, we show how, to yield the real cost of borrowing, the price level can be combined wit...
We examine the relationship between prices and interest rates for seven advanced economies in the pe...
Many empirical studies have found that interest rate increases have a positive effect on the price l...
Every once in a great while, history provides us with a natural experiment, an episode in which a ma...
This paper investigates the long run relationship between nominal interest rate and the inflation ra...
This paper aims to provide an analysis and explanation of the curious empirical relationships that e...
This paper compares the behaviour of long-term interest rates and prices in Italy, the UK and the US...
This paper provides a new explanation for Gibson's Paradox -- the observation that the price level a...
International audienceAccording to the quantitative theory of money, an expansion of the money suppl...
This paper aims to show why Irving Fisher's own data on interest rates and inflation in New York, Lo...
In this paper, we use new data and modern time series econometrics to reassess the relationship betw...
Fisher’s Price Expectation Effect: an explanatory approach to Gibson’s Paradox? Gibson’s parado...
Gibson paradox remains a puzzle in the discipline of economics. Previous studies attempted to resolv...
This paper adopts a New Keynesian approach to analyze the relationship between nominal interest rate...
We examine the relationship between prices and interest rates for seven advanced economies in the pe...
In this study, we show how, to yield the real cost of borrowing, the price level can be combined wit...
We examine the relationship between prices and interest rates for seven advanced economies in the pe...
Many empirical studies have found that interest rate increases have a positive effect on the price l...
Every once in a great while, history provides us with a natural experiment, an episode in which a ma...
This paper investigates the long run relationship between nominal interest rate and the inflation ra...
This paper aims to provide an analysis and explanation of the curious empirical relationships that e...
This paper compares the behaviour of long-term interest rates and prices in Italy, the UK and the US...
This paper provides a new explanation for Gibson's Paradox -- the observation that the price level a...
International audienceAccording to the quantitative theory of money, an expansion of the money suppl...
This paper aims to show why Irving Fisher's own data on interest rates and inflation in New York, Lo...
In this paper, we use new data and modern time series econometrics to reassess the relationship betw...
Fisher’s Price Expectation Effect: an explanatory approach to Gibson’s Paradox? Gibson’s parado...
Gibson paradox remains a puzzle in the discipline of economics. Previous studies attempted to resolv...