by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
January/February 1995
How costly would it be in terms of lost output and
jobs to lower the inflation rate to zero? One can answer
this counterfactual question only in the context of
a model that allows us to estimate the effects of pursuing
counterfactual monetary policies. The answer to the
question can vary widely depending upon the characteristics
of the model used to address it.
This article argues that one cannot answer the above
question accurately without using a model that properly
captures an important feature of the real world: the
persistence of inflation. This persistence and the cost
of disinflating may arise for several reasons, including
the inertia that wage and price contracts impart to
the inflation rate, the inertia that slowly adjusting
expectations may impart to inflation, or the inertia
that imperfect credibility may impart to inflation.
The author examines the question using the results of
both stylized and fully articulated models. Social
Security Reform: Links to Saving, Investment, and Growth.
This article reviews the presentations at the conference
and the themes that developed from the discussions.
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