Journal Article
How useful are leading indicators of inflation?
Abstract: Many economists expect inflation to rise in 1995. These expectations are based on various approaches to forecasting inflation. One approach is based on the standard economic theory that inflation rises when slack is eliminated from the economy and production exceeds capacity constraints. According to this view, measures of economic slack such as unemployment and capacity utilization provide useful information about the inflation outlook. But the relationship between slack and inflation is complicated and subject to variable lags.> Uncomfortable with this complex relationship, some analysts rely on alternative approaches to forecasting inflation. One approach is based on \\"leading indicators\\" of inflation. The leading indicators typically incorporate information on selected prices to augment or replace information on economic slack. The prices selected are usually key commodity prices that fluctuate more or less continuously in response to changing economic conditions. Prominent leading indicators of inflation include the price of gold, broader indexes of commodity prices, and composite indicators that combine several economic series believed to predict the inflation rate.> Garner examines five widely watched leading indicators and concludes that the composite indicators have given the most useful early warning signals of inflation turning points, but none of the indicators has recently been successful in predicting inflation magnitudes.
Access Documents
File(s): File format is application/pdf https://www.kansascityfed.org/documents/1203/1995-How%20Useful%20Are%20Leading%20Indicators%20of%20Inflation%3F.pdf
Authors
Bibliographic Information
Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
Part of Series: Economic Review
Publication Date: 1995
Volume: 80
Issue: Q II
Pages: 5-18