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Autore: | Bersch Julia |
Titolo: | Inflation Dynamics in Mongolia : : Understanding the Roller Coaster / / Julia Bersch, Steven Barnett, Yasuhisa Ojima |
Pubblicazione: | Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2012 |
Edizione: | 1st ed. |
Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (22 p.) |
Disciplina: | 338.158294 |
Soggetto topico: | Inflation (Finance) - Mongolia |
Finance - Mongolia | |
Agriculture: Aggregate Supply and Demand Analysis | |
Business Fluctuations | |
Consumer price indexes | |
Cycles | |
Deflation | |
Diffusion Processes | |
Dynamic Quantile Regressions | |
Dynamic Treatment Effect Models | |
Economic theory & philosophy | |
Economic Theory | |
Economic theory | |
Food prices | |
Government policy | |
Inflation | |
Macroeconomics | |
Price controls | |
Price indexes | |
Price Level | |
Prices | |
Supply and demand | |
Supply shocks | |
Time-Series Models | |
Soggetto geografico: | Mongolia |
Altri autori: | BarnettSteven OjimaYasuhisa |
Note generali: | Description based upon print version of record. |
Nota di bibliografia: | Includes bibliographical references. |
Nota di contenuto: | Cover; Contents; I. Introduction; Figures; 1. Inflation: Headline CPI; 2. Inflation, 1995-2010; II. A Closer Look at the Consumer Price Index; 3. Export Earnings and Fiscal Spending; 4. Administered Price Changes; 5. Inflation: Contributions to Change; 6. Inflation Rates; Tables; 1. Descriptive Statistics of the Overall Inflation Rate and the Main Subcomponents; 7 Seasonal Factors; 8. Inflation Rates (In percent, seasonally adjuted annualized rate month-on-month); 9. Inflation Rates (In percent, seasonally adjusted annualized rate) |
III. Understanding Inflation Through its Time Series PropertiesA. Inflation Persistence and Expectations; 2. Persistence in CPI and its Subcomponents; 10. Inflation: Persistence Shocks; 3. Mongolia and Other Copper Producers; B. Vector Auto-Regression (VAR) Analysis; 11 Impulse Response Functions; IV. Demand-pull Factor of Inflation; A. The Role of Fiscal Spending; 12 Variance Decomposition; 13. Fiscal Spending (In percent of non-mineral GDP); 14. Fiscal Spending (In percent, 4-quarter moving average, year-on-year); 4. Inflationary Impact of Government Spending, 2000-11 | |
B. The Role of Output Gaps and the Exchange Rate15. Mongolia: Output Gap (2000Q1-2011Q4); 16. Exchange Rates; 5. Phillips-Curve Estimation; V. International Context; A. Commodity Prices; 17. Food Prices; 18. Rice Prices; 19. Wheat and Flour Prices; B. Price Spillovers from Neighboring Countries-China and Russia; 6. China and Russia; VI. Conclusion; Annex. The Ulaanbaatar and National CPIs; References | |
Sommario/riassunto: | Inflation in Mongolia resembles a roller coaster ride with sharp rises and steep drops. Understanding why is critical for formulating and assessing monetary policy. Food prices are found to be a key driver of inflation, and, not surprising given Mongolia’s geography, are determined primarily by local supply conditions, highly seasonal, and subject to large but short-lived shocks (usually weather related). Nonetheless, demand factors are also found to be significant in explaining price movements and empirical evidence suggests that a 10 percent increase in government wages, for example, would push up underlying inflation by 1 percentage point. So, while inflation will remain volatile due to agricultural shocks, there is space for macroeconomic stabilization policy to help reduce inflation volatility. |
Titolo autorizzato: | Inflation Dynamics in Mongolia |
ISBN: | 1-4755-9827-0 |
1-4755-3267-9 | |
Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
Record Nr.: | 9910826179203321 |
Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
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