Definition of inflation
A persistent or continuing rise in the average price level
- originates from the Latin inflare (to blow into or inflate)
Why is inflation always related to the value of currency itself
because it directly impacts the purchasing power of that currency
Inflation in commodity money vs fiat money
Long term Inflation trends
Price indices inflation
The Price Revolution
Demand pull inflation
Why do prices rise as when output rises
Keynes on inflation.
-Unlikely to occur in a negative output gap as there is room for expansionary policies to stimulate demand without necessarily causing inflation
- However, there is a tradeoff between inflation and unemployment (Philip’s Curve) & therefore policymakers should accept a temporary higher inflation rate in return for boosting AD
- Focuses on demand-pull inflation. Does not really have an answer for cost push inflation. By adjusting fiscal and monetary policies, governments can influence overall demand in the economy but not really supply
Keynes on trade-off between inflation & unemployment
Keynesian theory suggested that the immediate priority should be to address high unemployment and under-utilized resources. Even if increasing government spending led to a moderate level of inflation, Keynes argued that it was a preferable trade-off compared to the social costs of widespread unemployment. In the long run, the economy would adjust, and the benefits of full employment would outweigh the temporary inflationary pressures.
How is inflation calculated
The Living Costs and Food Survey (LCF)
Why are consumers interested in inflation
Why are businesses interested in inflation
Why is the Government interested in inflation
Why are workers and trade unions interested in inflation
If inflation lowers standards of living for the population, why would this have a bigger impact on low income families
Fiscal drag
Asset price inflation
Hoarding
…
- defined as acquiring a good, service or asset in excess of immediate needs
The Great Moderation
Positive of inflation in regards to wage stickiness
Inflation decreases the real value of wages, in the absence of corresponding wage rises. In the theory of wage stickiness, a cause of unemployment in recessions and depressions is the failure of workers to take pay cuts, to decrease real labour costs. It is observed that wages are nominally sticky downwards, even in the long term (it is difficult to reduce nominal pay rates), and thus that inflation provides useful erosion of real costs wages without requiring nominal wage cuts.
Inflation Control as a Means, Not an End
Sound money