Inflation (Up Learn) Flashcards

1
Q

Inflation

A

A sustained increase in the general price level. Average price of goods and services is rising. If uncontrolled, it leads to hyperinflation.

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2
Q

Causes of Inflation

A

Demand-Pull and Cost-Push

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3
Q

Demand-Pull

A

Shown on LRAS or Keynesian or SRAS. When the population is high, AD curve shifts to the right, the price level increases. When AD increases, it pulls up the price level which leads to inflation

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4
Q

Cost-Push

A

When there are high costs, it shifts SRAS curve to the left, which pushes up the price level which leads to inflation.

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5
Q

Hyperinflation

A

When inflation rate increases above 50%

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6
Q

Deflation

A

A sustained decrease in the general price level. Stuff gets cheaper.

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7
Q

Deflationary Spiral

A

The spiral begins with deflation which is where there is sustained fall in general price level. Consumers notice the falling prices and decide to delay their purchases and wait for prices to fall further. So there is a reduce is current consumption which reduces AD. The fall in AD lowers the price level again and so consumers further delay their purchases. And the cycle repeats.

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8
Q

Effects of Deflationary Spiral

A

Real GDP decreases and unemployment increases as they had to fire workers.

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9
Q

Causes of Deflation

A

Decrease in AD, Increase in AS

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10
Q

Decrease in AD

A

Eg: if investment decreases = AD shifts to the left, price level decreases, which is deflation

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11
Q

Increase in AS

A

A reduction in price causes a reduction in firms costs, causes firms to produce more, shifts SRAS/LRAS to the right and so price level falls.

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12
Q

When can you only look at SRAS or LRAS curve?

A

When costs are changing

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13
Q

What does a change in price level cause?

A

A change in value of money i.e. what our money is worth.

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14
Q

Increase in price level: Inflation

A

Decrease in value of money as goods get more expensive and so you buy less with your money

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15
Q

Decrease in price level: Deflation

A

Increase in value of money i.e. each £ gets us more of those goods as it is cheaper

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16
Q

Nominal

A

How much you earn in pounds

17
Q

Real

A

How much your income is really worth

18
Q

High inflation and prices leads to…

A

Low real income (because inflation was removed)

19
Q

Real income in terms of nominal income

A

Nominal income minus effects of inflation

20
Q

Inflation rate

A

% change in price level

21
Q

How to calculate UK’s price level?

A

Stage 1 - ONS conducts its Living Costs and Food Survey. This involves interviewing 7000 households to find 650 most common goods and services and to find % of their spending that goes on each of these goods and services.
Stage 2 - ONS conducts price survey where they collect prices of these 650 goods from the basket across the UK to find the average price of each good.
Stage 3 - a weighted average of all the prices is calculated to find the price level. Then convert price level into CPI to make it easier to calculate rate of inflation.

22
Q

Disinflation

A

When inflation rate is positive but decreasing. Price level is increasing by less year by year

23
Q

Problems with CPI

A

Unusual spending habits, Time lag, Changes in quality, Doesn’t include mortgages.

24
Q

Unusual spending habits

A

Some people would spend differently to what the average consumer would get. What they spend wouldn’t be in the CPI basket. The unusual customer wouldn’t experience the same price changes as an average customer. Therefore it makes CPI inaccurate

25
Q

Time Lag

A

CPI is only updated once a year. Won’t include goods in the basket that have recently become popular so fails to measure changes in price level. The recently popular goods would only go in the basket 1 year later

26
Q

Changes in Quality

A

When prices increase, it isn’t because of inflation but it’s with a product that has got better quality: iphone 5 and iphone x. Prices increased because of changes in quality, not inflation.

27
Q

No Mortgages

A

Mortgages is when someone borrows money to buy a house so you have to pay regularly. When bank interests rise for example, the mortgages rise. People spend most of their income on mortgages.

28
Q

RPI

A

Similar to CPI, but includes mortgages. This is to see how mortgage payments are changing each year and give pensions to the elderly according to their mortgages.

29
Q

Benefits of High Inflation

A

Protects against deflation. Reduced debts (higher prices means money you owe is worth less so real value of debt decreases). Lower real wages meaning lower costs for firms and gov.

30
Q

Price Wage Spiral

A

High inflation, Higher prices, higher costs of living, demand for more wages to cover their costs of living, increases firm costs, SRAS curve would shift to the left and so price level increases.

31
Q

Cons of High Inflation

A

Price wage spiral which would lead to hyperinflation. Reduces real wages (real value decreases so real wage would fall, workers grow poorer). Makes investment more risky as you don’t know the future prices and costs which decreases investment.