BIS Papers by year

Monetary policy and the measurement of inflation: prices, wages and expectations

BIS Papers No 49
January 2010

Issues of inflation measurement are fundamental to the conduct of monetary policy. Price indices form the foundation of central bank policy frameworks around the world. They serve as guides to decision-making, as well as providing the primary mechanism for holding independent policymakers accountable. To shed some light on the role of inflation measurement, the annual meeting of Deputy Governors of emerging market economies (EMEs), held in Basel on 5-6 February 2009, explored three issues: price indices used by central banks; the role of wages and productivity in inflation policy; and the measurement and assessment of inflation expectations. This volume contains contributions by senior central bankers and BIS staff. The issues are summarised in an overview chapter by Stephen Cecchetti.

Price indices used by central banks. The primary price indicator or target of EME central banks is headline CPI, supplemented by other indicators. At least two issues of measurement arise. The first is transitory phenomena, or noise, that should not affect policymakers' actions. Many central banks deal with noise by using measures of underlying or core inflation that exclude certain prices from computation in the index. The second issue is measurement biases, related to the way in which individual prices are weighted together to form an aggregate index (weighting bias; eg substitution bias); or due to actual errors in measuring the individual prices themselves (eg quality or new goods bias).

Wages, productivity and structural inflation. Wages are a key element in the inflation process: wage growth equals productivity growth plus inflation and real wage growth that is in line with labour productivity growth is widely seen as a precondition for macroeconomic stability. In EMEs, a close relationship between real wage growth and labour productivity growth helps preserve external competitiveness while limiting inflationary pressures and the risk of a wage-price spiral developing. The adoption of inflation targeting frameworks by many emerging market central banks has provided an incentive to compile better labour market data and has enabled central banks to use productivity and unit labour costs more widely in their inflation forecasts. Other aspects of the role of wages in inflation are highlighted by two-sector models of differential productivity growth in tradable and non-tradable industries. One implication is that the rate of wage increase will depend on wage increase in the tradable sector. Another is that inflation sometimes reflect productivity growth in tradable industries, so not all inflation in rapidly-growing EMEs is necessarily undesirable or avoidable.

Inflation expectations and monetary policy. Three issues may be highlighted that are discussed in this volume drawing on EME experience: (i) How central banks measure inflation expectations and use such measures; (ii) the relationship between inflation expectations and the costs of disinflation; and (iii) whether monetary policy frameworks are effective in anchoring inflation expectations. Measurements of expectations  draw either on surveys (of households and businesses, professional forecasters and financial market participants) or financial markets (eg the difference in return between an inflation-linked bond and a nominal rate). As for the costs of disinflation, these are related to inflation persistence, which can in turn be related to expectations (eg backward-looking, or reflecting limited information about central bank objectives). Finally, the experience of central banks suggests that inflation expectations have been better anchored in this decade.


Full text:


Page
Participants in the meeting

iii
   
BIS background papers
  
Overview of "Monetary policy and the measurement of inflation: prices, wages and expectations"
Stephen G Cecchetti
1
Some issues in measuring and tracking prices in emerging market economies
Ramon Moreno
13
Wages, productivity and "structural" inflation in emerging market economies
Dubravko Mihaljek and Sweta Saxena
53
Inflation expectations, persistence and monetary policy
Ramon Moreno and Agustín Villar
77
   
Contributed papers
 
Monetary policy and measures of inflation
Miguel Angel Pesce
93
Survey-based inflation expectations in Brazil
Carlos Hamilton V Araujo and Wagner P Gaglianone
107
Terms of trade, commodity prices and inflation dynamics in Chile
Jorge Desormeaux, Pablo García and Claudio Soto
115
Assesing inflationary pressures in Colombia
Hernando Vargas, Andrés González, Eliana González, José Vicente Romero and Luis Eduardo Rojas
129
Inflation expectations under Czech inflation targeting
Mojmír Hampl
173
Measures of trend inflation in Hong Kong
Frank Leung, Kevin Chow and Simon Chan
177
Monetary policy under import price shocks: the case of Hungary
Zoltán M Jakab and Ferenc Karvalits
201
Monetary policy in response to imported price shocks: the Israeli case
Zvi Eckstein and Guy Segal
209
Measures of core inflation in Korea
Jae Chun Kim, Yang Woo Kim and Seung Yong Lee
233
On the predictive content of the PPI on CPI inflation: the case of Mexico
José Sidaoui, Carlos Capistrán, Daniel Chiquiar and Manuel Ramos-Francia
249
Measurement of price indices used by the central bank of Peru
Adrián Armas, Lucy Vallejos and Marco Vega
259
Measurement of inflation and the Philippine monetary policy framework
Diwa C Guinigundo
285
To what extent can we trust core inflation measures? The experience of CEE countries
Piotr Wiesiołek and Anna Kosior
297
Monetary policy and the measurement of inflation: prices, wages and expectations - Saudia Arabia's case
Abdulrahman Al-Hamidy
325
Monetary policy and the measurement of inflation: prices, wages and expectations – a South African perspective
South African Reserve Bank
331
Monetary policy and underlying inflation pressures: the essence of monetary policy design
Atchana Waiquamdee, Pranee Sutthasri and Surach Tanboon
347
Difficulties in inflation measurement and monetary policy in emerging market economies
Mehmet Yörükoğlu
369