Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7356158 Journal of Applied Economics 2015 26 Pages PDF
Abstract
The Central Reserve Bank of Peru (BCRP) has been targeting inflation for more than a decade, using Lima's inflation as the operational measure. An alternative indicator is countrywide inflation, whose quality and real-time availability have improved substantially. Given these competing measures, two policy questions arise: What have been the implications for national inflation of targeting Lima's inflation? Would shifting to a national aggregate significantly affect the workings of monetary policy in Peru? To answer these questions, we estimate a large, but parsimonious, error correction model and investigate how regional shocks propagate across the country. The results indicate that a shock to Lima's inflation is transmitted fast and strongly elsewhere in the country, whereas the effects of shocks in other regions are limited and short-lived. This constitutes supporting evidence to the view that by targeting Lima's inflation, the BCRP has effectively, albeit indirectly, targeted national inflation.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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