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INFLATION MODEL (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131764


Inflation in China: old versus new Phillips Curves / Mazumder, Sandeep   Journal Article
Mazumder, Sandeep Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Among the few papers that have examined the determinants of inflation dynamics in mainland China, the majority of those that have investigated this matter argue that the traditional Phillips curve does not fit China's data. Some authors, however, conclude that the New Keynesian Phillips Curve does a better job of describing Chinese inflation behaviour in recent decades. This paper conducts an analysis of China's inflation behaviour from the late 1980s onwards by estimating both traditional and new Phillips curves using improved econometric techniques. We find that the New Keynesian Phillips Curve performs poorly in explaining China's inflation behaviour, whereas the traditional 'old' Phillips curve does significantly better.
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2
ID:   103946


Inflation model for India in the context of open economy / Joshi, Ajit R; Acharya, Debashis   Journal Article
Joshi, Ajit R Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract In this article, an atheoretic model is built to explain and forecast inflation, using variables that capture domestic as well as foreign influences on inflation. In all, five specifications of models are estimated, one with only domestic variables and four with one of the foreign price variables, namely, Commodity Price Index (COMM), US Producer Price Index (USPPI), crude oil price (CRUDE), industrial countries' Consumer Price Index (CPI) (INDCPI). It is found that models with foreign price indicators provide better in-sample fit than the baseline model with only domestic variables. Among the models with foreign price variables, the Commodity Price Index (COMM) performs as the best foreign price variable among the set used, in terms of both in-sample and out-of-sample root mean squared errors (RMSE).
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