摘要:Although the maintenance of price stability and the attainment of full employment are important
macroeconomics goals in any economy, Nigeria still contends with problems of high inflation and
unemployment. This study examines the Phillips curve hypothesis (inflation and unemployment
trade-off ) and its stability in Nigeria from 1980 to 2016 using the Autoregressive Distributed Lag
(ARDL) bounds testing approach. Other estimation techniques including the Fully Modified Ordinary
Least Squares (FMOLS), Dynamic Ordinary Least Squares (DOLS), Static Ordinary Least Squares
(OLS), and Canonical Cointegrating Regression (CCR) were employed to ascertain the consistency
and robustness of the results that were generated using the ARDL bounds testing method. The
results of the cointegration test reveal the existence of a long-run relationship between inflation
and unemployment. The results of the ARDL bounds testing, FMOLS, DOLS, static OLS and CCR
estimations indicate that there is a trade-off relationship between the variables, and higher unemployment
leads to lower inflation in the long-run. The plots of the cumulative sum of squares
of recursive residuals (CUSUMQ) confirm the stability of the long-run parameters. The results of
the causality test using the standard Granger causality test and the Toda and Yamamoto approach
demonstrate that there is unidirectional causality from inflation to unemployment. Based on these
findings, this study recommends policies to reduce both inflation and unemployment.