菲利普斯曲线分析的政策含义演变

The Evolution and Policy Implications of Phillips Curve Analysis

Econometric Reviews · 1985
被引 13
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

梳理了菲利普斯曲线从最初认为通胀与失业可权衡,到自然率假说和理性预期假说推翻这一权衡关系的理论演变,并指出政策制定者仍可通过稳定政策和改善市场效率来降低失业波动和平均水平。

Abstract

The policy implications of the Phillips curve relationship between inflation and unemployment have changed dramatically in the twenty-seven years since A.W. Phillips first identified a negative correlation between money wage changes and joblessness in Great Britain. Originally, Phillips own findings suggested that policymakers could move the economy along his curve, trading off higher inflation for lower unemployment until the best (or least undesirable) attainable combination of both had been reached. Today, such a view is widely discredited. The statistical relation between inflation and unemployment has broken down and the Phillips curve is now generally viewed as offering no trade-off at all. This radical change in the policy implications of the Phillips curve did not occur all at once; rather it was the cumulative result of a series of theoretical innovations, which Thomas M. Humphrey chronicles in The Evolution and Policy Implications of Phillips Curve Analysis. The two most important innovations were the natural rate hypothesis, which implies that unemployment can be reduced below its normal rate only by fooling the public with surprise inflation, and the rational expectations hypothesis, which implies that the public cannot be systematically fooled. Together, these two hypotheses imply that no systematic macroeconomic policy can affect unemployment. Even though no inflation-unemployment trade-off exists for policymakers to exploit, as Humphrey points out, policymakers can still contribute to reducing the variability and average level of unemployment by avoiding erratic policy changes and by enacting measures to improve the efficiency and performance of labor and product markets.

菲利普斯曲线自然率假说理性预期假说政策含义