Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland

This paper uses an open economy version of a wage-price model with imperfect competition in goods and labour markets to analyse wage and price inflation in Iceland. The model identifies three main sources of wage and price inflation in Iceland: a conflicting claims channel, a real exchange rate chan...

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Main Author: Thórarinn G. Pétursson
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://www.sedlabanki.is/uploads/files/wp-16.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:ice:wpaper:wp16_thorarinn 2024-04-14T08:13:27+00:00 Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland Thórarinn G. Pétursson http://www.sedlabanki.is/uploads/files/wp-16.pdf unknown http://www.sedlabanki.is/uploads/files/wp-16.pdf preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:36:11Z This paper uses an open economy version of a wage-price model with imperfect competition in goods and labour markets to analyse wage and price inflation in Iceland. The model identifies three main sources of wage and price inflation in Iceland: a conflicting claims channel, a real exchange rate channel, and an excess demand channel. The model explains a large proportion of wage and price inflation during the last three decades and is remarkably stable, considering the fundamental changes in the institutional setup in Iceland during this period. There is some evidence of an upward shift in the equilibrium mark-ups in the late 1980s. The results indicate that this was due to a substantial rise in the cost of capital that reflected the move towards market determined interest rates and a shift in policy priorities towards price stability, which cumulated in a path-breaking labour market agreement in early 1990. These changes led to a downward shift in steady state inflation and an upward shift in the natural rate of unemployment. Report Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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language unknown
description This paper uses an open economy version of a wage-price model with imperfect competition in goods and labour markets to analyse wage and price inflation in Iceland. The model identifies three main sources of wage and price inflation in Iceland: a conflicting claims channel, a real exchange rate channel, and an excess demand channel. The model explains a large proportion of wage and price inflation during the last three decades and is remarkably stable, considering the fundamental changes in the institutional setup in Iceland during this period. There is some evidence of an upward shift in the equilibrium mark-ups in the late 1980s. The results indicate that this was due to a substantial rise in the cost of capital that reflected the move towards market determined interest rates and a shift in policy priorities towards price stability, which cumulated in a path-breaking labour market agreement in early 1990. These changes led to a downward shift in steady state inflation and an upward shift in the natural rate of unemployment.
format Report
author Thórarinn G. Pétursson
spellingShingle Thórarinn G. Pétursson
Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland
author_facet Thórarinn G. Pétursson
author_sort Thórarinn G. Pétursson
title Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland
title_short Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland
title_full Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland
title_fullStr Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Wage and price formation in a small open Economy: Evidence from Iceland
title_sort wage and price formation in a small open economy: evidence from iceland
url http://www.sedlabanki.is/uploads/files/wp-16.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://www.sedlabanki.is/uploads/files/wp-16.pdf
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