Working Paper

Demand versus Supply: Which is More Important for Inflation?


Abstract: I use Phillips curve type regressions to assess the relative contributions of demand and supply forces to U.S. inflation during the pandemic era from February 2020 onward and the decade following the end of the Great Recession. In the first specification (Model 1), demand and supply forces are measured using the vacancy-unemployment ratio and the New York Fed’s Global Supply Chain Pressure Index, respectively. In the second specification (Model 2), demand and supply forces are measured using the demand-driven and supply-driven components of PCE inflation from Shapiro (2025). The results derived from the two models are largely in agreement. For both models, variance decompositions imply that demand forces became more important for inflation during the pandemic era and dominated the influence of supply forces. In counterfactual simulations, both models imply that supply forces, together with the endogenous response of expected inflation, were the primary drivers of persistently low inflation after the Great Recession. Given that monetary policy operates to influence demand-driven inflation, this result helps to account for the Fed’s difficulty in achieving its 2% inflation goal during these years.

JEL Classification: E31; E32; E37;

https://doi.org/10.24148/wp2025-08

Access Documents

File(s): File format is application/pdf https://www.frbsf.org/wp-content/uploads/wp2025-08.pdf
Description: Full text - article PDF

Authors

Bibliographic Information

Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Part of Series: Working Paper Series

Publication Date: 2024-04-24

Number: 2025-08