Abstract

This paper explores the impact of the adoption of inflation targeting (IT) on the dynamics of city-level inflation in Korea using both aggregate and sector-level data. When looking at aggregate regional inflation, we find that the mean, volatility and persistence fell in all cities in the wake of the monetary policy regime change, consistent with other evidence in the literature. We also note a narrowing of the dispersion of regional inflation across cities and a greater degree of regional co-movement. Delving more deeply into the disaggregate data reveals additional insights however. For most of the changes we observe in the dynamics of regional inflation, we find that the aggregate effects are being driven primarily by sectors that fall into the ‘Services’ category. We posit that the impact of better anchored inflationary expectations is primarily on the less-traded services sectors of the economy, where the domestic monetary policy framework has a relatively larger influence compared with globally-traded commodities. When it comes to the increased co-movement observed across regions under IT regime, however, it is the ‘Commodities’ sectors rather than ‘Services’ that are responsible, probably because services inflation becomes relatively more influenced by local factors once it has stabilized within the target range. We show that this sectoral heterogeneity can be explained by the difference in price stickiness such that sectors in which prices are adjusted less frequently tend to have a larger response under the new monetary policy regime.

Highlights

  • There is a large literature examining the impact of inflation targeting (IT) on inflation performance at the aggregate level (e.g., Mishkin and Schmidt-Hebbel 2007, Choi et al 2011)

  • We examined the impact of the adoption of IT on regional inflation dynamics using disaggregate sectoral price data for Korea

  • Given that heterogeneity of regional inflation dynamics may be due to the segmentation of labor and product markets, it is useful to examine how the heterogeneity of regional inflation differs across sectors before and after the monetary regime change

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Summary

Introduction

There is a large literature examining the impact of inflation targeting (IT) on inflation performance at the aggregate level (e.g., Mishkin and Schmidt-Hebbel 2007, Choi et al 2011). We find that sectors with a higher degree of price stickiness experience a larger decline in inflation persistence under the IT regime, in line with the findings by Choi and O’Sullivan (2013) for Canada This may reflect the more forward-looking behavior of firms in these sectors who are more sensitive to a change in the monetary regime that impacts the formation of inflationary expectations. This section delves into the heterogeneous response of regional inflation within the framework of common factor model analysis and via an examination of the behavior of inter-city relative prices This is followed by an analysis of the role of price stickiness as a potential source of the observed heterogeneity.

The Data and Preliminary Analysis
Preliminary Analysis
Econometric Analysis of City-Level Inflation by Sector
Structural Changes in Inflation
Dynamic Properties of Inflation Series
Impact of IT on Spatial Co-Movements of Inflation
Common Factor Model Analysis
Impact of IT on Intercity Relative Prices
Price Stickiness as a Potential Factor behind the Sectoral Heterogeneity
Concluding Remarks
Findings
Commodities 2 Services
Full Text
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