2. General terms
DEFLATION = opposite to inflation, occurs when the general
level of prices is falling
DISINFLATION = describe the process of reducing a
nation’s rate of inflation
STAGFLATION = high inflation in periods of high
unemployment
REVALFLATION = impact of inflation, where the result is an
inner valorisation of exchange rate
Rate of inflation
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( )1
1
−
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=
tyear
tyeartyear
tyear
levelprice
levelpricelevelprice
i
3. PRICE INDEXES
• Consumer price index (CPI) - each item is assigned a fixed
weight proportional to its relative importance in consumer
expenditure budget
• Producer price index (PPI) - measures the level of prices at
the wholesale or producer stage
• GDP deflator – the ratio of nominal GDP to real GDP can
be interpreted as a comprehensive price index
100
00
10
∗=
∑
∑
PQ
PQ
CPI
100
01
11
∗=
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PQ
PQ
deflatorGDP
4. Numerical Example
Calculate the consumer price index and the rate of inflation for 2006.
Base year (2000)
Weigh (%) Price
2006
Weigh(%) Price
Food 20 100 20 102
Shelter 50 100 50 106
Medical
care
30 100 30 110
5. Categories of Inflation according to its
pace/rate:
MODERATE INFLATION – occurs when prices are
rising slowly (we might classify this as single-digit
annual inflation rates 0-10 % per year)
GALLOPING INFLATION - occurs when prices start
rising at double-or-triple digit rates (20, 100 % a year)
HYPERINFLATION – the extraordinary price
increase (at annual rate of 100 % or more prevailing
in a nation for at least one year)
6. Inflation according to:
a) its impact on individual
commodity:
Balanced – leaves relative
prices unchanged all prices
are rising at the same
percentage point each year it
doesn’t cause a change in
consumption structure
Unbalanced – some prices are
increasing faster than the
general price level there can
be seen an expressive impact
on the demand and
consumption structure
b) predictability
Anticipated
Unanticipated
Inertial inflation = tends to
stay at its prior rate until
shocked by economic
events.
7. IMPACT OF INFLATION
„cost of inflation“
1) Redistribution of income and wealth
2) Social impacts
3) Impact on balance of economy
8. SUMMARY OF IMPACTS
there is no effect on real output, efficiency, or income
distribution of an inflation that is both balanced and
anticipated
generally, the economic impact of an unanticipated
moderate inflation is mainly on the distribution of income
and wealth, and less on the efficiency of the system
the mildest impact will be found when inflation is at a
low rate – small, anticipated and balanced
major social and economic impacts arise for galloping
inflation or hyperinflation
9. Causes of Inflations
1.DEMAND-PULL
INFLATION
- the essence of demand-
pull inflation is too
much spending
beating against a
limited supply
2. COST-PUSH
INFLATION
- first appeared during
the 1930’s and the
1940’s
- inflation caused by
continual decrease in
aggregate supply
10. THE PHILLIPS CURVE
the Phillips curve depicts the relationship
between unemployment and inflation, both in
percent
SHORT-RUN PHILLIPS CURVE
a nation could buy a lower level of
unemployment if it were willing to pay the
price of a higher rate of inflation
11. The shifting Phillips curve
„Boom cycle“
Period 1: unemployment is at the natural rate; no demand or supply
surprises; economy is on the lower short-run Phillips curve
Period 2: rapid increase in output during an economic expansion (f. e.
as a result of expansion policy) lowers the unemployment rate
wages and prices begin to accelerate the economy moves up
and to the left along the short run PC
Period 3: Firms and workers begin to expect higher inflation higher
expected rate of inflation gets incorporated into wage and price
decisionsthe short-run PC shifts upward
Period 4: unemployment rate returns to the natural rate; contraction
in economic activity brings output back to its potential.
12. The vertical Long-Run Phillips curve
When the unemployment rate diverges from the
NRU the inflation tends to change
According to the natural rate theory, the only level
of unemployment consistent with a stable inflation
rate is the natural rate of unemployment the
long-run PC is a vertical line rising straight up at the
NRU
13. Two important implications for
economic policy:
1) there is a minimum
level of unemployment
that an economy can
sustain in the long run;
2) the nation can
temporarily enjoy low
rate of unemployment,
but at the expense of
rising inflation
WAYS (COSTS) OF DISINFLATION:
Temporary increase in
unemployment above the NRU
Income policies (wage- price
control or voluntary guidelines)
14. 1. Calculate the CPI and IPD, if following amount of
products was consumed in economy:
Product 1.Year 2. Year
Price Quantity Price Quantity
A 16 120 000 21 142 000
B 820 31 000 815 33 100
C 3 600 290 4 050 270