When and Why does Bangladesh’s Inflation Differ from India’s?
Published By: BB on eSS | Published Date: January, 14 , 2013India and Bangladesh share a common historical background, geographical proximity, institutional
similarities, and a policy shift towards economic liberalization since the early 1990s. Inflation between these
countries, however, often remains remarkably different, and the series of inflation differential between them does
not follow any consistent pattern over time, suggesting an intriguing area of investigation. Working over the 1979-
2010 period, this study finds support in favor of the Friedman hypothesis of the primacy of money supply in
determining inflation in a country after accounting for supply shocks. In an Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ADL)
model, this work shows that Bangladesh experienced higher inflation than India whenever Bangladesh’s money
supply grew faster than India’s. The same is true for India as well, suggesting that both central banks must maintain
their restrained stance in money supply if they need to lower inflation. [Working Paper Series: WP 1301].
Author(s): Biru Paksha Paul, Hassan Zaman | Posted on: Dec 05, 2013 | Views(625) | Download (622)