inflation Flashcards

1
Q

definition of inflation

A

the sustained rise in the average price level of goods/ services over a period of time

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2
Q

measurments of inflation

A

consumer price index (geometric mean of a basket of goods)

retail price index

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3
Q

types of inflation

A

demand-pull (AD shifts to the right)

cost-push (AS shifts to the left)

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4
Q

demand -pull inflation (def, policies, why)

A
demand in the economy increases prices
monetary policy (interest rates and QE)
could be caused by a change in demand components, eg consumer confidence
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5
Q

cost-push inflation (def, policies, why)

A

FOPs increase in price causes fall in SRAS
fiscal policy tackling supply
caused by possible increase in price of exports

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6
Q

deflation

A

the persistent fall in the average level of prices

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7
Q

disinflation

A

where the rate of inflation decreases

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8
Q

spiral of inflation

A

monetarist view, as either AD or SRAS shift, a shift of the other will result because LRAS takes longer to change

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9
Q

costs of inflation

A
loss of purchasing power (inflation faster than incomes-benefits)
discourage saving (vice versa for deflation)
commercial interest rates
international competitiveness (exports less competitive..)
uncertainty
labour unrest (if wages not keeping up with inflation)
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10
Q

explain loss of purchasing power

A

If there is inflation, but have same income=fall in real income;
inflation linked incomes (can be due to strong trade unions), inflation can be higher than expected

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11
Q

how inflation discourages saving

A

better to spend earlier,

people who want to save will start spending on fixed assets (housing)

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12
Q

how commercial interest rates are affected by inflation

A

banks want to keep making money, will raise interest rates on borrowing and lower on savings

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13
Q

effect on international competitiveness

A

exports may decrease as price increases, but imports increase because of lower price

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14
Q

uncertainty because of inflation

A

discouraged investment because of uncertainty in the economy

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15
Q

types of deflation

A

good deflation

bad deflation

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16
Q

good deflation

A

due to improvements in the supply-side of the economy and/or improved productivity; LRAS; results in increased real output and fall in unemployment

17
Q

bad deflation

A

from demand-side of the economy

reduced real output and employment

18
Q

costs of deflation

A

Udi
unemployment (companies lay off worker as consumers wait for prices to be at lowest(deferred consumption) then confidence decreases)
investment (less profits and lower business confidence reduces investment)
debtors (value of debt rises with deflation)

19
Q

limitations of cpi

A

basket made for typical family, not all
(regional difference not included, affect on wages)
data collection errors (all has to be samples)
changes in the contents of baskets according to consumer spending, difficult for analysis
different methods create international inaccuracies
seasonal changes could affect it
does not include prices of fops (commodity price index; could indicate cost-push pressures)

20
Q

monetarist- excess monetary growth cause

A

they believe inflation always caused by an excess supply of money in an economy; increases in AD are purely inflationary

21
Q

reducing inflation evaluated

A

(higher taxes reducing disposable income and consumption/ lower government spending UNPOPULAR (eg. subsidized theatres in UK))
TIME LAG between need for change and legislation
central bank control DE-POLITICIZES it
fiscal policies have larger time-lapse,
monetarists- SUPPLY regulated to national output
elected governments do not always have LONG-TERM INTEREST at heart

22
Q

importance of independent central bank

A

can make politically unpopular decisions; as long as confidence in them, then less expectations of inflation therefore reducing cost-push pressures as they don’t ask for wages to increase