When it Comes to Core Inflation, Momentum Trumps Mean Reversion

 | Feb 28, 2023 17:56

Over the last couple of decades, the assumption that inflation is mean-reverting to something approximating the Fed’s target level (or to where inflation expectations are supposedly – without any evidence advanced to support the notion – ‘anchored’) has become a key component of most economists’ models.

I’ve discussed before how after a quarter-century of having low and stable inflation , any model which did not assume mean reversion has been discarded because it made bad predictions over that period compared to ones which did.

A critical follow-up question is whether a model should assume mean reversion in inflation. My observation implicitly says that it should not. If I’m wrong, and inflation in fact is mean-reverting, then the right models won and there’s no real problem.

So, did the right models win?

There are many sophisticated ways to test for mean reversion, but an intuitive one is this: for a given current level of inflation, which is a better guess:

  • a) Inflation will be closer to the ‘mean’ in the next period;
  • b) Inflation will be about the same distance from the mean (homeostasis), neither pulling towards the mean nor pushing away from the mean;
  • c) inflation will be further away from the mean, such that deviations from the mean get amplified over time.

In the case of 'b' (homeostasis), we would say that inflation itself has momentum; in the case of 'c', we would say the acceleration of inflation has momentum. The latter case seems an unlikely case of extreme instability: it says that once prices move away from equilibrium, the economy either enters into an inflationary spiral or a deflationary spiral with no clear end. While this clearly can eventually happen in the hyperinflation case, those cases seem to have other causes that tend to amplify the swings (notably, an accelerating loss of faith in the currency itself).

Let’s consider the first and second scenarios, and look at some historical data.

The chart below shows the period 1957-2022. The x-axis indicates the current level of inflation, (I collapse the range from -0.5% to +0.5% and call it 0%, +0.5% to +1.5% and call it 1%, etc), and the y-axis shows the average inflation over the subsequent one year. So, the point that is at [2%, 2.3%] shows that between 1957 and 2022, if inflation was between 1.5% and 2.5% then the average inflation over the ensuing 12 months was 2.3%.