Working papers economics - Adverse Weather-Induced Inflation: Some Implications for Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy

Keep in mind

The series Working Papers on Economics is published by the Office for Economic Studies at the Banco de la República (Central Bank of Colombia). It contributes to the dissemination and promotion of the work by researchers from the institution. This series is indexed at Research Papers in Economics (RePEc).

On multiple occasions, these works have been the result of collaborative work with individuals from other national or international institutions. The works published are provisional, and their authors are fully responsible for the opinions expressed in them, as well as for possible mistakes. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Banco de la República or its Board of Directors.

When weather shocks are persistent —as in the extreme scenario— they generate more lasting inflationary pressures that justify more restrictive monetary policy responses, albeit with higher costs in terms of economic activity. 

Publication Date:
Thursday, 03 July 2025

This paper examines the macroeconomic impacts of adverse weather shocks on the Colombian economy, with a specific focus on agricultural output, food prices, and headline inflation. Drawing on empirical evidence from events such as the 2015–2016 El Niño, we document that these shocks tend to reduce agricultural output and increase inflation while having a limited effect on aggregate GDP growth.

Motivated by these stylized facts, we develop a small open economy New Keynesian model for Colombia that introduces a mechanism in which weather shocks alter the relative prices of agricultural and non-agricultural goods. This framework allows us to capture the inflationary pressures induced by adverse climate events in a structural setting. Under our proposed calibration, food inflation, headline inflation, and inflation expectations rise in response to the shock, prompting the monetary authority to raise the interest rate to anchor inflation expectations.