Inflation & Deflation Flashcards

1
Q

Define cost-push inflation

A

Increasing costs of production that push up the average price level

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2
Q

What causes higher costs of production

A
Wage costs 
Oil prices
Import prices
Exchange rate
Taxation
Wage price spiral —> inflation causes higher prices —> labour demand higher nominal wages which in turn increases costs of production
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3
Q

What are the costs of inflation

A

Uncertainty —> firms less willing to invest —> uncertain about future prices, profits and costs
Fall in value of savings —> consumers savings will see a fall in the real value of their savings —> inflation higher than interest rates (savings will decrease)
Fall in value of debt —> reduce real value of debt —> consumers and firms pay back their debt easier
Reduced purchasing power —> nominal income doesn’t rise with inflation then consumers can buy fewer g/s
Shoe leather costs —> firms have to spend time looking for best prices from suppliers
Menu costs —> firms have to change price lists and labels
Fiscal drag —> incomes rise with inflation —> consumer may move into higher tax band —> no better off in real terms
Loss of international competitiveness —> domestic goods become relatively more expensive compared to foreign countries

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4
Q

What are the costs of deflation

A

Decreases spending —> consumers delay purchasing in expectation of lower prices
Real value of debt increases —> deters businesses from borrowing
Interest rate effectively increases
Government debt as a % of GDP will increase (decreases real tax revenue but debt serviced stays the same)
Deflationary spiral —> falling prices and lower wages —> dampens AD (consumption and investment) and lower confidence

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