3.3 Inflation And Deflation Flashcards

1
Q

Inflation definition

A

The sustained rise in the general price level over time

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2
Q

Deflation definition

A

A fall in the average level of prices over time

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3
Q

Disinflation definition

A

Where the rate of inflation is falling but is still positive

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4
Q

What are the two causes of inflation?

A
  • demand pull inflation

- cost push inflation

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5
Q

Demand pull inflation definition

A

Inflation caused by excessively high levels of aggregate demand, where there is pressure on resources

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6
Q

Why does demand pull inflation occur?

A

When are you demand is growing and substrain ability there is pressure on resources to produce increase their prices and earn more profits

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7
Q

What causes demand pull inflation?

A

Any change to AD that shifts AD in excessively

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8
Q

Cost push inflation definition

A

Inflation that occurs due to rises in the cost of production incurred by firms

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9
Q

Why do firms increase their prices due to cost push inflation?

A

Higher cost of production means less profit margin unless they increase their prices

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10
Q

What two things does cost push inflation lead to and why?

A
  • inflation as firms rise there prices to maintain profit

- falling growth as increase cost of production shift SRAS left

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11
Q

Quantity theory of money definition

A

A alternative explanation for inflation which states that the only cause of inflation is excessive growth in the money supply

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12
Q

Fisher equation

A

M x V = P x Q

M is money supply
V is velocity of circulation
P the average price level
Q is real national output ( RNI )

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13
Q

Velocity of circulation definition

A

The rate at which money circulates around the economy

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14
Q

What is the main theory of the Quantity theory of money?

A

Monetarist state that there is inflation if money supply increases at a faster rate the national income

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15
Q

What does PQ mean?

A

Price level x quantity of real food sold

= nominal national income

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16
Q

What assumption do we make about V (velocity of money)?

A

It is constant

17
Q

Chain of reasoning for quantity theory of money

A
  • increasing money supply = increase AD as more money to spend
  • firms increase supply in the short run. A positive output gap occurs
  • = more workers employed = more wages = increase in costs for firms = put up prices to keep profit margin
  • inflationary pressure means the real value of money falls = less AD as money can buy less
  • workers demand higher wages to make up for inflation = left shift in SRAS
  • output of the economy returns to equilibrium but the price level is higher
18
Q

Consequences of inflation to consumers

A
  • affects low and fixed incomes the most as money has less purchasing power so cost of necessities are more expensive
  • loans that are not payment fixed will be cheaper to pay back
  • search and shoe leather costs
  • fiscal drag
  • redundancies as firms try to cut costs
19
Q

Shoe leather costs definition

A

The costs in time and money involved in making price comparisons

20
Q

Fiscal drag definition

A

Taxpayers pulled into a higher tax band despite incomes not rising in real terms

21
Q

Consequences of inflation for firms

A
  • menu costs
  • higher interest rates due to inflation mean borrowing and investing are less attractive
  • workers might demand higher wages which will increase cost of production
  • less price competitive on a global scale = less exports
  • unpredictable inflation will affect business confidence = less investment
22
Q

Consequences of inflation for governments

A
  • government have to increase welfare payments and state pension because cost of living is increasing
23
Q

Why are there higher interest rates during periods of inflation?

A

The government implements deflationary polices which are usually higher interest rates

24
Q

Menu costs definition

A

The cost associated with updating the changes in price over time

25
Q

What are the two types of deflation?

A

Benign/good deflation

Malevolent/bad deflation

26
Q

Benign deflation definition

A

A fall in the price level due to increases in aggregate supply
(usually due to falling costs of production)

27
Q

Malevolent deflation definition

A

A fall in the price level due to a fall in aggregate demand

28
Q

Why is benign deflation good?

A

And increase in aggregate supply, either in the short run or in the long run will lead to a lower price level but also a higher level of real GDP

29
Q

Why is malevolent deflation bad?

A

A fall in aggregate demand lead to falling prices and falling real GDP
= negative multiplier

30
Q

Consequences of deflation

A
  • delays in consumption as consumers believe prices will be lower in the future = AD falls = malevolent deflation increases future
  • rising real value of debt
  • wage rigidity leads to unemployment as wages are too high for the labour market to clear
31
Q

Why do incomes fall during deflation?

A

Incomes fall to maintain real incomes

32
Q

Commodity definition

A

A homogenous product that is often used as a basic input into production e.g. oil, copper ect

33
Q

Why do you commodities have a significant effect on inflation rate?

A

Due to their importance in production

34
Q

Open economy definition

A

An economy in which foreign trade accounts for significant proportion of its GDP

35
Q

How does inflation effect being in an open economy?

A

Changes in other economies can affect inflation in the UK