Inflation Flashcards
What is the inflation target rate
2%
What was the inflation in October 2022
11.1%
Explain how inflation negatively impacts investment
- Creates uncertainty about the future decentivising firms
- Means interest rates are likely to increase in the long term
Explain how inflation negatively impacts international competitiveness
If inflation rates are higher than in other countries, UK goods and services are less price competitive, reducing exports
Explain how inflation impacts living standards
Reduces consumption so reduces standard of living
Who are the ‘winners and losers’ in inflation
Winners are people with a fixed interest rate
Losers are people with a fixed income e.g. pensioners and current account holders
Why is the inflation target not 0%
- Nominal wage goes up more but real wage stays the same (psychological)
- Less risk of deflation
What is the difference between malevolent and benign deflation
- Malevolent is caused by lack of demand
- Benign is caused by lower costs of production
What are the drawbacks of malevolent deflation
- Consumers expect falling prices so save more to wait for the price to decrease
- Deflation increased the value of fixed debt so people with fixed debt save more
- Banks can’t boost AD through negative real interest rates because inflation is negative
What are the causes of benign deflation
- Technology increases productivity
- Cheaper imports
Inflation/deflation evaluation
- is it malevolent or benign
- extent and time period
- what is happening in other countries
What are causes demand pull inflation
- positive output gap
- Firms see opportunity to have better profit margins by putting prices up
- Firms have to increase output to meet demand, which costs money
What are the causes of cost push inflation
- costs of production rise so firms increase prices to maintain profit margins
Explain the wage price spiral
When inflation causes workers to demand higher wages, causing costs of production to increase, causing more cost push inflation (cycle repeats)
How do changes in commodity prices impact inflation
- Increase in oil prices can cause stagflation (worry since 1970s)
- Decrease in oil prices can cause benign deflation (2014/15)