Inflation and Deflation Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of Deflation:

A
  • Sustained period of negative inflation
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2
Q

Definition of Hyperinflation:

A
  • inflation of more than 50 percent per month (or roughly 13,000 percent per year)
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3
Q

Definition of Velocity of money: (formula)

A
  • Shows how quickly money moves through the economy
  • Ratio of nominal GDP to the money supply:

( V = P . Y/ M )

  • “V” stand for Velocity of money
  • “P” stand for Price
  • “Y” stand for Output
  • “M” stand for Money Supply
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4
Q

Definition Quantity equation of money: (Formula)

A
  • relationship among the money supply, velocity, and nominal GDP:

M.V 􏰀= P.Y

  • “V” stand for Velocity of money
  • “P” stand for Price
  • “Y” stand for Output
  • “M” stand for Money Supply
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5
Q

In the long run, two of the growth rates in the Quantity Equation of Money are outside the control of the central bank:

A
  • Output
  • Velocity
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6
Q

Why the Output growth in the long-run is independent from central bank?

A
  • Output growth depends on factors that affect the economy’s productivity, such as new technologies.
  • Long-run neutrality means that monetary policy is irrelevant, therefore, the central bank.
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7
Q

Why the Velocity growth in the long-run is independent from central bank?

A
  • Long-run changes in velocity are driven primarily by changes in transaction technologies—the methods people use to acquire and spend money.
  • Velocity moves in the opposite direction from money demand.
  • Innovations such as ATMs have slowly reduced money demand, so velocity has risen.
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8
Q

From Money Growth to Inflation (Graph)

A
  • “i” stand for nominal interest rate
  • “r” stand for real rate
  • “AE” stand for aggregate expenditure
  • “Y” stand for output
  • “π” stand for inflation rate
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9
Q

Determinants of Money Growth and Inflation (graph)

A
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10
Q

what is Bimetallism?

A
  • Monetary system in which money is backed by both gold and silver
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11
Q

what is The Output–Inflation Trade-Off ?

A
  • A central bank allows inflation to rise if it accommodates an adverse supply shock, such as a rise in oil prices.
  • The aim of policymakers is not to raise output but merely to keep it from falling below potential.
  • Then if the central bank want to return to the prevous equilibrium, it use desinflation policies
  • desinflation policies created a temporally fall in output
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12
Q

what is the definition “Printing money” for the central bank to the government?

A
  • Financing government budget deficits by selling bonds to the central bank
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13
Q

Definiton of “Seigniorage revenue”:

A
  • Revenue the government receives from printing money
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14
Q

what is the inflation fallacy ?

A
  • a worker’s standard of living depends on her real wage (not nominal wage), the ratio of her/his wage to the aggregate price level.
  • Inflation raises the numerator and denominator of this ratio by the same amount, so the real wage is unchanged.
  • The real wage is determined by other factors, such as the worker’s productivity.
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15
Q

which are the adverse effects of high inflation that economists have identified?

A
  1. shoe leather costs
  2. distracted firms
  3. relative-price variability
  4. income inequality
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16
Q

Definition of Shoe leather costs:

A
  • Inconveniences that result from holding less money when inflation is high.
  • Lower money holdings mean that transactions become harder, making life less convenient.
  • People try to minimize their money holdings so, they rush to buy goods as soon as they receive their pay to avoid the fast depreciation of it whealth.
17
Q

How “Distracted Firms” is one of the adverse effects of high inflation?

A
  • firms try to minimize money holdings; they constantly move cash into bank accounts with interest that compensates for inflation.
  • These activities consume managers’ time and attention. Coping with inflation leaves less time for normal business activities, such as developing new products or improving productivity
18
Q

what is “Relative-Price Variability” in an economy with high inflation?

A
  • When inflation is high, all firms raise their prices by large amounts. But they do so at different times.
  • Some prices are abnormally high compared to others, just because they have adjusted more recently. In other words, inflation causes dispersion in relative prices.
19
Q

How income inequality get worse with high inflation?

A
  • The poor have relatively large money holdings. They receive their wages in cash and have no bank accounts, so inflation is costly.
  • The rich have access to bank accounts with high nominal interest rates that compensate for inflation.
  • The salaries of professional workers are often indexed to inflation
  • The wages of unskilled workers are slower to adjust when inflation accelerates.
20
Q

why moderate inflation is stil harmful? (acording to some economist) (most important)

A
  • Inflation Uncertainty
  • Inflation and Taxes
21
Q

why Inflation Uncertainty is bad? (acording to some economist)

A
  • Uncertainty about inflation creates risk in loan markets
  • Wealth is redistributed between borrowers and lenders. This redistribution can harm the economy
  • uncertainty about inflation discourages both borrowers and lenders from entering the loan market. Each group is deterred by the risk of redistributions.
  • The financial system becomes less effective at channeling funds to investors from savers, hurting economic growth.
22
Q

why Inflation have an adverse effect in the tax proccess? (and secondary effect)

A
  • When inflation rises, people pay higher taxes on the income they earn from savings.
  • You pay taxes based on your nominal interest income. This income has risen, so you pay higher taxes on the same real income.
  • When inflation raises these taxes, saving falls. The result is lower investment and lower economic growth.
23
Q

Definition of “After-tax real interest rate” (R¬):(formula)

A
  • the interest rate adjusted for both taxes and inflation:

R¬ = (1 - m) r - m.pi

  • “r” stand for real interest rate
  • “pi” stand for inflation
  • “m” stand for tax rate
  • “R” stand for “After-tax real interest rate”
24
Q

Definition of “Liquidity trap”:

A
  • situation in which output is below potential at a nominal interest rate of zero (a real interest rate of 􏰅-pi)
  • Eliminating the central bank’s usual ability to raise output and inflation
  • Zero-bound problem
25
Q

Definition Zero bound:

A
  • The limit on the nominal interest rate; a central bank cannot reduce “i” below zero, which limits its ability to stimulate the economy
26
Q

A Liquidity Trap (graph)

A
27
Q

A Vicious Circle graph (liquidity trap)

A
28
Q

The Market for Money in a Liquidity Trap (graph)

A
29
Q

Proccess of a liquidity trap (steps)

A
  1. Lower Bounds on Interest Rates
  2. Role of Deflation
  3. The Irrelevance of Money Growth
30
Q

what is the behabiour of the “Lower Bounds on Interest Rates”

A
  • There is a limit on the central bank’s options: it must set a nominal rate of zero or higher.
  • A negative nominal interest rate is impossible.
  • problem can arise if an adverse expenditure shock occurs, causing a recession.
  • To end the recession, the central bank must reduce the real interest rate, and the lower bound may get in the way. (because the interest rate is already zero).
31
Q

what is the Role of the Deflation in a liquidity trap?

A
  • If an economy enters a liquidity trap, it can be hard to escape. Indeed, the economy can fall into a vicious circle in which the liquidity trap and deflation reinforce one another.
  • In a liquidity trap, a high real interest rate keeps the economy in a recession.
  • The recession reduces inflation through the Phillips curve; even if inflation is positive initially, it may fall below zero.
  • With the nominal interest rate stuck at zero and inflation falling, the real interest rate rises.
  • The higher real interest rate worsens the recession, which pushes inflation down further, and so on.
  • Output and inflation can spiral downward.
32
Q

Is there a escape from a liquidity trap ?

A

According to some economist:

  1. Reducing Long-Term InterestRates
  2. Raising Expected Inflation
  3. Using Fiscal Policy
33
Q

How do you escape a liquidity trap by reducing Long-Term Interest Rates?

A
  • The central bank can reduce long-term rates by reducing either expected short rates or term premiums
34
Q

the expectations theory of the term structure of interest rates (graph)(formula)

A
35
Q

How the Fed escape (at least tried) the liquidity trap by reducing Long-Term Interest Rates? (2008-2010)(expected interest rates)

A

the Federal Reserve tried to do both:

  1. Influence expected interest rates:
    * The Fed sought to influence expected interest rates through announcements.

  • During 2009 and 2010, as the Federal Open Market Committee maintained a target range of 0 to 0.25 percent for the federal funds rate, it repeatedly signaled an intention to keep its target low.
  • A typical announcement occurred on August 10, 2010, when the FOMC said that economic conditions “are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.
  • The “extended period” language was meant to drive down expected future interest rates in the equation for long-term rates.
36
Q

How the Fed escape (at least tried) the liquidity trap by reducing Long-Term Interest Rates? (2008-2010)(term premiums)

A

the Federal Reserve tried to do both:

  1. Influence the term premiums:
    * by shifting the composition of its open-market operations
    * it increased its purchases of long-term bonds and bought relatively few short-term bonds
    * By raising the demand for long-term bonds, the Fed hoped to raise their prices relative to those of short-term bonds and thereby reduce their yields to maturity
    * It reduces long-term interest rates for a given path of short-term rates; in other words, it reduces term premiums.
37
Q

How do you escape a liquidity trap by Raising Expected Inflation?

A
  • central bank facing a liquidity trap should announce that it plans to increase inflation in the future.
  • If the public believes that the central bank eventually will raise inflation, then expected inflation rises.
  • The efficacy of this tactic is unclear, partly because the Federal Reserve has not tried it.
38
Q

How do you escape a liquidity trap by Using Fiscal Policy?

A
  1. By using expansionary fiscal policy:
    * An increase in government spending or a tax cut shifts out the AE curve, raising output at the current real interest rate
    * If an inward shift of the curve has produced a liquidity trap, a fiscal expansion can reverse this shift.
    * In addition, if deflation is occurring, fiscal policy can cause an output boom that pushes inflation above zero.
    * A disadvantage of fiscal expansion is that it increases the level of government debt.
    * Keynes, who pointed out the problem of the liquidity trap, also suggested this.