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salvora's avatar

Hey, thanks for this, very interesting!

I don't fully understand how the model predicts the impact of tariffs of different goods on inflation. I understand the assumptions in the model, but not how the model predicts the impact. Can you explain how this is done? (I am imagining this the econometrics part, which might be too abstract, even so if you could describe at top level.) Thanks!

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Thomas L. Hutcheson's avatar

Tariffs can, do change relative prices. They cannot affect the average price level except by affecting the way the central bank makes monetary policy. Now one of the things that a reasonable central bank will do is to try to adjust the price level so as to permit changes in relative prices (from tariffs or anything else) not to cause markets in whihc there are downwardly sticky prices to fail to clear -- for unemployed resources to appear. While that adjustment is going on, while the price level is adjusting is inflation.

Tariffs + wise central bank monetary policy = (temporary) inflation + (hopefully) no unemployment

Tariffs + unwise central bank monetary policy = no inflation + unemployment

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