Price puzzle
The price puzzle is a phenomenon in monetary economics observed within structural vector autoregression models. It refers to the counterintuitive result where a contractionary monetary policy shock—typically modeled as an increase in short-term interest rates—is followed by an increase, rather than a decrease, in the price level. This anomaly challenges conventional macroeconomic theories that predict a decline in prices as monetary tightening reduces aggregate demand.
Historical Context
The term "price puzzle" was first introduced by Lawrence Christiano in 1992, who observed this anomaly in SVAR models analyzing U.S. monetary policy. Early studies found that when using short-term interest rates, such as the federal funds rate, as the primary indicator of monetary policy, SVAR models often produced results inconsistent with theoretical expectations. This sparked a series of investigations into the limitations of these models and the underlying causes of the puzzle.Efforts to Resolve the Price Puzzle
Augmented Information Sets
One approach to resolving the price puzzle involves expanding the information set in SVAR models. For instance, including variables like commodity prices or Federal Reserve forecasts can provide additional context for policy decisions, reducing the puzzle's prevalence.Improved Identification Strategies for Monetary Policy Shocks
High-Frequency Identification (HFI)
High-frequency identification exploits financial market reactions in narrow windows around monetary policy announcements. This approach leverages the fact that movements in financial instruments during a tight window around Federal Open Market Committee announcements are likely driven by monetary policy news rather than other macroeconomic factors.Sign Restrictions
Uhlig pioneered the use of sign restrictions in monetary policy SVARs. This approach imposes theoretically motivated restrictions on impulse responses while remaining agnostic about the response of key variables of interest. Modern applications often combine sign restrictions with other identifying assumptions:- Narrative restrictions
- Zero restrictions
- Long-run restrictions