← Search

Inflation and the Distribution of Price Changes

Michael F. Bryan1,2; Stephen G. Cecchetti3,4,5,6

1 Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta · 2 Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland · 3 National Bureau of Economic Research · 4 Centre for Economic Policy Research · 5 Federal Reserve Bank of New York · 6 Brandeis University

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1999 open access

This paper reconsiders the empirical evidence connecting inflation to its higher-order moments. In particular, we examine the statistical properties of the observed positive correlation between the sample mean and the sample cross-sectional skewness of price changes. This correlation has attracted substantial attention over the years and has recently been the focal point of a debate among macroeconomists. We show that the sample mean-skewness correlation suffers from a small-sample bias that accounts for the entirety of the observed correlation. In other words, we establish that one of the stylized facts in the literature on aggregate price behavior need not be a fact at all.

DOI
10.1162/003465399558148
Volume
81 (2)
Pages
188-196
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref