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A micro-based non-inflationary rate of capacity utilisation as a measure of inflationary pressure: evidence for Austria

Pirmin Fessler, Fabio Rumler and Gerhard Schwarz

Empirica, 2014, vol. 41, issue 1, 23-36

Abstract: We derive a non-inflationary rate of capacity utilisation (NIRCU)—as recently proposed by Köberl and Lein (Can J Econ 44:673–694, 2011 )—based on a large Austrian firm-level panel dataset ranging from 1996 to 2011. By conditioning the current capacity utilisation of firms on their current and planned price adjustments, a micro-level NIRCU is defined as the level of capacity utilisation at which there is no need for the firm to adjust its prices. In contrast to other measures of inflationary pressure, this measure (1) is timely available without revisions and (2) does not imply any need for rather arbitrary methods or concepts such as statistical filtering or potential output. In accordance with the results in Köberl and Lein (Can J Econ 44:673–694, 2011 ), we find that the NIRCU performs well as a driving variable of Austrian inflation in various Phillips Curve estimations. Compared to other inflation driving variables, such as real unit labor cost, the output gap and the unemployment gap, it delivers reasonable parameter estimates which are in line with existing Phillips Curve estimations in the literature. Copyright Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014

Keywords: Capacity utilisation; NIRCU; New Keynesian Phillips Curve; Survey data; E31; E32; E52 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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DOI: 10.1007/s10663-013-9230-2

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