Wage–price spirals: what is the historical evidence?

C-Tier
Journal: Economica
Year: 2024
Volume: 91
Issue: 364
Pages: 1291-1319

Authors (6)

Jorge Alvarez (not in RePEc) John Christopher Bluedorn (not in RePEc) Niels‐Jakob Hansen (not in RePEc) Youyou Huang (not in RePEc) Evgenia Pugacheva (not in RePEc) Alexandre Sollaci (International Monetary Fund (I...)

Score contribution per author:

0.168 = (α=2.01 / 6 authors) × 0.5x C-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

How common are wage–price spirals, and what has happened in their aftermath? We construct a new historical database of wage–price spirals—identified as episodes with consumer price inflation and average nominal wage growth rising jointly for at least a year—going back to the 1960s for a large sample of advanced economies. We find that only about a quarter of such episodes were followed by sustained accelerations in wages and prices. Instead, nominal wage growth and inflation tended to stabilize at a higher level on average, and then gradually revert, with real wage growth broadly unchanged. A decomposition of average wage dynamics during wage–price spiral episodes using a wage Phillips curve suggests that nominal wage growth normally stabilizes at levels consistent with observed inflation and labour market tightness. After historical episodes exhibiting rising inflation, falling real wages, and tightening labour markets—similar to what was observed in the early post‐COVID‐19 recovery in 2021—inflation tended to decline and nominal wage growth to rise, allowing real wages to gradually catch up. Our findings suggest that an acceleration of nominal wages against a backdrop of rising inflation does not necessarily signal that a persistent wage–price spiral dynamic is taking hold.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:bla:econom:v:91:y:2024:i:364:p:1291-1319
Journal Field
General
Author Count
6
Added to Database
2026-01-29