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The Recent Rise in US Inflation: Policy Lessons from the Quantity Theory

Quarterly Review 4422 | Published July 12, 2024

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Authors

Han Gao University of New South Wales, Sydney
Juan Pablo Nicolini Senior Research Economist and Universidad Torcuato Di Tella
The Recent Rise in US Inflation: Policy Lessons from the Quantity Theory

Abstract

We build a scenario for inflation in the United States in the years to come. Following Gao, Kulish, and Nicolini (2021), we use the quantity theory of money as a conceptual framework and confront the theory with evidence from both the United States and other OECD countries. We argue that a) the quantity theory of money works very well in the medium term, which we define to be close to four years; b) deviations from the inflation rate predicted by the quantity theory tend to disappear in the medium term; c) the burst in inflation that started in 2021 in the United States is a deviation from the inflation rate predicted by the quantity theory; and d) if the policy framework does not change, we expect inflation to be back close to its 2% target no later than 2025.




This article was previously published as [Staff Report 650](https://doi.org/10.21034/sr.650).