The Political Effects of Ageing on Inflation

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Series Details Vol.51, No.5, September-October 2016
Publication Date September 2016
ISSN 0020-5346
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This Intereconomics article is available for free at this page after an embargo period of two years. Reading it before then is possible via SpringerLink.Why do different countries exhibit different inflation rates? Most political economy accounts emphasise the role of ideas and institutions: as economic research shows that low inflation is achievable at no economic cost, governments delegate monetary policy to independent central banks. Countries with independent central banks and unions that anticipate the consequences of their actions by coordinating wage bargaining in turn achieve lower inflation.

This conventional wisdom downplays the importance of interests, ignoring the significant influence that a growing electoral group – the elderly – has on inflation. Because the elderly are politically powerful and inflation averse, countries with more elderly citizens force political parties to adopt more economically orthodox policies when in power, resulting in lower inflation rates in those countries. Ageing populations may therefore lock in a low inflation regime, even when this is not economically desirable.

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Intereconomics: Archive http://archive.intereconomics.eu/years/
SpringerLink: Intereconomics http://link.springer.com/journal/10272

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