Abstract:
The UK relationship between nominal wage inflation and the unemployment rate is unstable. Over sub-periods of the last 160 years of turbulent data, Phillips curve slopes range from strongly negative, slightly negative, flat, slightly positive and strongly positive. Our constant-parameter congruent model of real wages explains these instabilities, yet also implies a constant negative relationship between nominal wage inflation and the unemployment rate when corrected by its regressors. Disentangling these effects reveals that structural breaks in the real-wage model's variables do not explain the instabilities, which instead occur during sub-periods when some of its explanatory variables are insignificant.
Citation:
Castle, J. & Hendry, D.F., (2024), What a Puzzle! Unravelling Why UK Phillips Curves were Unstable, Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, https://doi.org/10.1111/obes.12615.