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Chris Ball's avatar

Another great post. Of course, if we don't know what determines inflation, we have the same problem with exchange rates. If PPP holds - which you assume in writing an open econ Fisher relationship, then P=EP*, in %change, inflation = %E + inflation*. Real int parity says r=r* --> i+inf = i*+inf* (inflation here is Expected) so we get i - i* = -(inf - inf*)=-%E. As you state. So, in many ways this column is just a restatement of your last column. That being said, I think your column is 100% right. All the failures in the NK and other models translate directly into open economy versions. At a deeper level, I think one missing piece - at least for me - is the distinction between what determines steady state inflation versus what determine deviations of inflation around a constant steady state. I think it's a point often overlooked because we usually assume steady state inflation is zero. But break open an NK model and nothing determined s.s. inflation, just that "it is the target". Push harder and they'll say, okay, assume an ad hoc real money demand equation and growth rate of M equals growth rate of P in steady state. ... Hmm. ... Anyway....Please keep pushing this line Prof Cochrane. I really think you are going in the right direction. Thanks.

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