| dc.description.abstract |
Price volatility has become a critical macroeconomic challenge in Sri Lanka, as persistent
fluctuations in food and non-food prices and exchange rates continue to intensify inflationary
pressures and erode household welfare. This study examines the dynamic relationship between
food price volatility and general price volatility in Sri Lanka, while explicitly evaluating Walsh’s
(2011) three key assumptions, namely that food inflation is sustained, persistent, and has secondround
effects. Assessing these assumptions enables the study to determine whether excluding
food price from core inflation is appropriate in the Sri Lankan context. The analysis begins with
the Pairwise Granger causality test to identify the direction of predictive relationships among the
variables. Based on this, the ARDL bounds testing approach and error correction models are
employed to capture both long-run and short-run dynamics, using monthly data from January
2014 to May 2025 obtained from the Department of Census and Statistics (DCS) and the Central
Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL). In addition, Impulse Response Functions (IRF) and Variance
Decomposition analyses are used to trace the transmission of shocks and to quantify the relative
importance of food, non-food, and exchange rate volatility to general price instability over time.
The Bai– Perron multiple breakpoint tests identify several structural shifts and confirm a mix of
I(0) and I(1) processes, validating the use of the ARDL framework. Empirical results reveal a
strong long-run cointegrating relationship between food price volatility and general price
volatility, indicating that food price shocks exert a persistent and significant influence on general
price volatility. The Impulse Response Function (IRF) and Variance Decomposition analyses
further show that food price volatility is the most influential driver of general price fluctuations,
accounting for nearly 19% of the variation in the final forecast horizon. Overall, the findings
identify food price volatility as the central determinant of price instability in Sri Lanka and
provide empirical support for Walsh’s (2011) argument that excluding food from core inflation is
inappropriate in economies where food prices are structurally persistent. These findings
highlight the need for policies aimed at stabilising food markets, safeguarding vulnerable
households, and restructuring core inflation measures to capture true inflationary pressures
more accurately. |
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