The Effects of Forward-Versus Backward-Looking Wage Indexationon Price Stabilization Programs

A standard open-economy model is used to show that price stabilization programs are more likely to succeed if labor contracts specify forward-looking wage indexation. Compared with contracts specifying backward-looking wage indexation or wages based on static expectations, such contracts will result in a greater reduction in inflation with lower output costs, smaller misalignment of real wages, smaller outflows of reserves, smaller disruptions caused by policy announcements, and a reduced impact of some shocks during price stabilization programs. These results are generally true whether or not capital is mobile and whether or not expectations are rational.
Publication date: April 1997
ISBN: 9781451845655
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Labor , Labor , Inflation , Inflation , inflation , wage , wage indexation , wages , real wages

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