4.11.3 - Inflation and Deflation Flashcards
Give a brief history of inflation and deflation in the UK.
- 1970s - accelerating rates of inflation
- 1980s - monetarist policy, control of inflation elevated to highest salience in government macroeconomic policy (1980 inflation rate = 20%)
- 1990s - UK inflation rate remained within 1% of 2% target set from 1993 to 2007
- 2000s - UK inflation rate remained within 1% of 2% target set from 1993 to 2007, 2008 credit crunch and escalating oil, gas, food and commodity prices, rate of inflation began to fall and deflation was expected
- 2010s - Inflation quite steady
- 2020s - Inflation high by 2023
What does a deflationary policy do?
Take excess demand out of the economy by fiscal/monetary policy.
What is demand-pull inflation?
A rising price level caused by an increase in AD.
What is cost-push inflation?
A rising price level caused by an increase in costs of production.
How can firms be persuaded to produce more output?
Increasing the price level.
Can be done by increasing AD (and any of its components) which may create the extra demand which pulls up the price level.
How can demand-pull inflationary pressures be offset?
A shift of the LRAS to the right.
What happens when AD shifts right when the economy is producing its normal capacity?
Increased long run demand-pull inflation with no increase in real output.
When does reflation give way to inflation?
When the AD curve is to the right of where the gradient of the SRAS curve is >1.
Why did the theories of cost-push inflation develop?
In the Keynesian era of 1960s/70s, the rate of inflation increased even when there was little evidence of excess demand in the economy.
What do cost-push theories generally argue as to the causes of inflation?
The growth of monopoly power in the labour market and its markets for goods and services.
How did monopoly power cause inflation in the Keynesian era?
Trade unions became more powerful, and were able to bargain for money wage increases in excess of any rise in labour productivity.
Monopoly firms were willing to pay these wage increases due to the costs of disrupting production and because they can pass on increasing costs as price rises.
Why must the government determine what causes inflation?
So the policies they implement are best to tackle either cost-push or demand-pull inflation.
Why does monetary policy tend to work to control inflation?
Assuming excess AD causes inflation, monetary policy can control inflation.
Why may monetary policy stop working to control inflation?
When there is cost-push inflation (possibly from imported energy or commodities).
What is narrow monetarism?
Centres on increases in the money supply as the prime cause of inflation.
Who are monetarists?
Economists who argue that a prior increase in the money supply is the cause of inflation.
What do monetarists argue that excess AD is caused by?
A prior increase in the money supply.