Inflation A general increase in prices caused by too much money in the circular flow
Imagine you have a job that pays $50 a day Imagine you have a job that pays $50 a day. You are pretty happy with your job and your ability to pay your bills with your income. At the end of the work day you receive your $50 and stop at the grocery store to buy dinner. When you get to the grocery store, you find out that your can of beeferoni is not $1.09 like it was yesterday, it is now $49. What happened?
Types of inflation Demand-Pull Inflation Cost-Push Inflation Too much spending chasing too few goods Cost-Push Inflation Supply shocks – abrupt increases in the cost or raw materials or energy sources
Hyperinflation Radical inflation – money becomes worthless and is no longer used as a median of exchange economic collapse and political chaos Examples: Germany after the war, after break up of Soviet Union
CPI – consumer price index Indication of inflation calculated by sampling households and monitoring expenditures on specific goods and services Core CPI takes out food and energy CPI not perfect – consumption patterns change, doesn’t account for quality and hard to account for new products
Downfalls of CPI Quality bias New product bias What happens when quality changes year to year? New product bias What happens when new products aren’t considered in CPI right away? (also price changes) Discounting and substitution What happens when we shop in new places?
Fixed CPI calculation = 105.5 or 5.5% inflation rate Year Theatre tickets (quantity) Cinema tickets (quantity) Theatre ticket (price) Cinema ticket (price) 2005 25 12 $40 $15 2006 15 18 $45 $10 (25 Theatre tickets x $45) + (12 Cinema tickets x $10) x 100 (25 Theatre tickets x $40) + (12 Cinema tickets x $15) = 105.5 or 5.5% inflation rate
An alternative – chain weighted CPI It implements weight shifting, which means the shift from one product to another due to the changed needs of the consumer. Suggested as a way for the government to save money
Chain weighted CPI calculation Year Theatre tickets (quantity) Cinema tickets (quantity) Theatre ticket (price) Cinema ticket (price) 2005 25 12 $40 $15 2006 15 18 $45 $10 (15 Theatre tickets x $45) + (18 Cinema tickets x $10) x 100 (25 Theatre tickets x $40) + (12 Cinema tickets x $15) = 72.5 or 27.5% deflation
Unexpected Inflation Unexpected inflation imposes costs on many people and benefits others because it arbitrarily redistributes purchasing power Inflation can reduce the rate of growth of national living standards because individuals and organizations use resources to protect themselves against the uncertainty of future price changes
Redistribution Effects Nominal income – the number of $ received as wages, rent, interest or profits Real income- measure of the amounts of goods and services nominal income can buy Real= nominal income / price index COLA – cost of living adjustment
How are different people affected? Hurts savers and people on fixed incomes Helps people who borrowed money at a fixed rate
MV = PQ Equation of Exchange M – Quantity of Money in the Economy V – Velocity of Money P – Price Level Q – Total Final Output Produced Fundamental cause of inflation is a growth of the money supply faster than the growth of goods and services