Working Paper

The Globalisation of Inflation: The Growing Importance of Global Value Chains

Raphael A. Auer, Claudio Borio, Andrew Filardo
CESifo, Munich, 2017

CESifo Working Paper No. 6387

Greater international economic interconnectedness over recent decades has been changing inflation dynamics. This paper presents evidence that the expansion of global value chains (GVCs), ie cross-border trade in intermediate goods and services, is an important channel through which global economic slack influences domestic inflation. In particular, we document the extent to which the growth in GVCs explains the established empirical correlation between global economic slack and national inflation rates, both across countries and over time. Accounting for the role of GVCs, we also find that the conventional trade-based measures of openness used in previous studies are poor proxies for this transmission channel. The results support the hypothesis that as GVCs expand, direct and indirect competition among economies increases, making domestic inflation more sensitive to the global output gap. This can affect the trade-offs that central banks face when managing inflation.

CESifo Category
Monetary Policy and International Finance
Trade Policy
Keywords: globalization, inflation, Phillips curve, monetary policy, global value chain, production structure, international inflation synchronisation, input-output linkages, supply chain
JEL Classification: E310, E520, E580, F020, F410, F420, F140, F620