Working Paper

Measuring Inflation Expectations in Interwar Britain

Jason Lennard, Finn Meinecke, Solomos Solomou
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9425

What caused the recovery from the British Great Depression? A leading explanation - the “expectations channel” - suggests that a shift in expected inflation lowered real interest rates and stimulated consumption and investment. However, few studies have measured, or tested the economic consequences of, inflation expectations. In this paper, we collect high-frequency information from primary and secondary sources to measure expected inflation in the United Kingdom between the wars. A VAR model suggests that inflation expectations were an important source of the early stages of economic recovery in interwar Britain.

CESifo Category
Fiscal Policy, Macroeconomics and Growth
Monetary Policy and International Finance
Keywords: policy regime change, economic history, Great Depression
JEL Classification: E300, E600, N140