Inflation: Definition, Causes, Measurement, Consequences and Corrective Actions
Inflation: Definition, Causes, Measurement, Consequences and Corrective Actions
Criticisms:
– Every increase in price level is inflationary and has
harmful consequences.
Problem
Prices rise faster than income
Standard of living declines
Deflation Defined
Running:
• price-level rises by approx 10% annually.
Galloping or Hyperinflation:
Prices rise every minute and there is no upward limit to which it
may rise in course of time.
– Lord Keynes has called it true inflation.
– This type invariably occurs after the point of full employment.
Price rises by 16% and more.
Examples are the Great Inflation of Germany after First World
War, and Great Chinese Inflation after the Second World War.
Causes of Inflation
Demand-Pull Inflation
Inflation is caused by an excess of demand (spending) relative to
the available supply of goods and services at existing prices.
– The Classical - the key factor is the money supply. The quantity
theory of money => only an increase in money supply is capable of
raising the general price level.
S
D2
Price level
D1
P2
D0
P1
P0 S
Y0
Real Income
Cost Push Inflation
This theory maintains that prices, instead of being
pulled-up by excess demand, are pushed-up as a
result of a rise in the cost of production.
S0
Y2 Y1 Y0
Shifts of the Short-Run Aggregate Supply Curve
Factors That Shift the Aggregate Supply Curve
Shifts to the Right Shifts to the Left
Increases in Aggregate Supply Decreases in Aggregate Supply
Lower costs Higher costs
lower input prices higher input prices
lower wage rates higher wage rates
Economic growth Stagnation
more capital capital deterioration
more labor
technological change
Public policy Public policy
supply-side policies waste and inefficiency
tax cuts over-regulation
deregulation
Good weather Bad weather, natural
disasters, destruction
from wars
MEASUREMENT OF INFLATION
General Price Level
Qi0 Pi0
Wi = ------------------
Σ Qi0 Pi0
i
where Qi0 and Pi0 are the quantity and price of the
good ‘i’ in the base period.
Price Index
A Price Index is expressed as the current price
in relation to its value in the base period.
Pit
PIt = Σ Wi ------
Pi0
Measuring the Inflation
Pt
Pt = ln ------ x 100
Pt-1
In economic terms
U = workforce – employed people
where
workforce = population – people not employed =
population employable (15-58 yrs)
Kinds of Unemployment
Open Unemployment
Seasonal:
some occupations are seasonal, e.g. farming
Underemployment:
number of hours worked is less than the full employment
hours’ norms. Part-time workers in industries and services and
full time workers in agriculture suffer from such a malady.
Full Employment
GDP Deflator
• Impact on household, business, and gov’t.