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Are Oil Shocks Inflationary?: Asymmetric and Nonlinear Specifications versus Changes in Regime
- Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking
- The Ohio State University Press
- Volume 34, Number 2, May 2002
- pp. 540-561
- 10.1353/mcb.2002.0041
- Article
- Additional Information
This paper identifies a structural break in core U.S. inflation Phillips curves such that oil prices contributed substantially before 1981, but since that time pass-through has been negligible. This characterization is robust to a variety of re-specifications and fits the data better than asymmetric and nonlinear oil price alternatives. Evidence does not support the hypotheses that declining energy intensity or deregulation of energy-producing and -consuming industries played an important role. Monetary policy did not itself become less accommodative of oil shocks, but may have helped create a regime where inflation is less sensitive to price shocks more generally.