Congratulation to the timeliness of your question! After what happened in
the last couple of weeks, we may in fact stand again at the beginning of a
Keynesian revolution. This notwithstanding, working with real variables
should lend your model greater credibility. Putting interest rates on the
right hand side of the equation is not an alternative to working with real
variables; it just tells you the impact of inflation on whatever you test
for.
CEO, Goldman Sucks :-)
_____
From: gretl-users-bounces(a)lists.wfu.edu
[mailto:gretl-users-bounces@lists.wfu.edu] On Behalf Of Mariusz Doszyn
Sent: Thursday, September 25, 2008 3:55 PM
To: Gretl list
Subject: [Gretl-users] Inflation...
Hello...
This question is not connected directly with gretl but I'll be grateful for
your opinions. I've estimated panel data models for mainly UE countries with
consumption, gross savings, invstments and money supply (M1) as dependent
variables and income, interes rates, consumer prices index and time variable
as an independent variables. Should all theses variables be corrected with
restpect to inflation rates? Or maybe it's better idea to put inflation rate
as an independent variable? Many keynesian economists used to analylize
nominal variables...
Thanks in advance for your help...
Best wishes...
Mariusz
Poland