Feeding Inflation: The Non‐Linear Spillovers of Global Food Commodities
Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics
Published online on March 27, 2026
Abstract
["Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, EarlyView. ", "\nABSTRACT\nThis paper examines the role of global food price shocks in driving inflation dynamics, with a particular focus on non‐linear effects and heterogeneity across countries. Using a Bayesian Vector Autoregression (BVAR) approach, we identify global food price shocks and assess their impact on inflation. Quantile regressions reveal that inflation's sensitivity to food price shocks is significantly higher in high‐inflation regimes, with elasticity estimates being significantly larger for higher percentiles compared to the median. Additionally, panel estimations indicate that this sensitivity is particularly pronounced in emerging economies and developing countries, where food constitutes a larger share of household consumption. Our findings contribute to the literature on global inflation synchronisation and highlight the importance of accounting for inflation regimes when analysing the transmission of food commodity price shocks.\n"]