W. Maliszewski
CASE Foundation
18
Grilli, Masciandaro and Tabellini (1991) support previous results. In the
regression analysis they find negative relationship between average inflation and CBI,
as well as between inflation variability and CBI measured by GMT index.
Alesina and Summers (1993) present an index of CBI which is the average of
Alesina and GMT indices. By plotting this index against the inflation mean and
inflation variability in 1955-88 period, they detect inverse relationship between CBI
and inflation performance (average rate and variability).
Cukierman (1992) and Cukierman et al (1992) test various hypothesis on the
relationship between inflation performance and CBI. They regress the depreciation in
the real value of money (defined as p/(1+p), where p is inflation rate) on the their
disaggregated measures
5
of legal independence and governor's turnover rate (for the
sample of seventy countries over four periods). In the whole sample (developed and
developing countries pooled together) the overall contribution of legal variables is
insignificant. The overall contribution of the legal variables is significant at the 0.22
level in the sub-sample of developed countries and insignificant for developing
countries. The governor's turnover rate is significant in the whole sample and in the
sub-sample of developing countries but insignificant in the sub-sample of developed
economies. This outcome confirms that the “behavioural” characteristics are better
measures of CBI for developing countries and reveals significant relationship between
CBI and inflation in this group. The results weakly support the presumption that the
legal aspects of CBI affect inflation in developed countries. The regression of the
depreciation in the real value of money on the aggregated index of legal independence
(LVAU) and on the variable measuring the compliance to the law (ratio of the actual
average term in office to the legal term in office) support these conclusions. The legal
index is significant and compliance variable is insignificant in the sub-sample of
developed countries. The opposite is true for developing countries. In another
regression the questionnaire based measures of independence are related to the
depreciation in the real value of money. They are significant (al least at 0.10 level),
entering disaggregated or aggregated. The turnover rate added to this regression is also
significant, indicating that this two measures account for different dimensions of
independence.
Eijffinger et al. (1997) check the sensitivity of the relationship between CBI and
inflation to the use of different indices of independence. They regress average inflation
rate and variance of inflation separately on Alesina, GMT, ES and Cukierman's LVAU
indices. The regression is done on the sample of twenty industrial countries over the
period 1972-92 and two sub-periods (1972-82 and 1983-92). Measures of CBI are
significant in all regressions for average inflation rate and in some regressions for
inflation variability. Because the coefficients in these regressions are not easy to
interpret, Eijffinger et al. (1997) estimate relationships between the log of inflation and
the log of CBI indices. Estimated elasticity of inflation to CBI is significant in most
cases and varies from -0.4 (LVAU index) to -0.7 (Alesina index) for the whole period.
The estimation results give strong support to the inverse relationship between CBI and
the average inflation and some support to the negative relationship between CBI and
inflation variability.
5
i.e., initially aggregated into eight legal variables (see description above).
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