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Published byMervyn Wright Modified over 9 years ago
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Inflation is a sustained increase in the prices of goods and services (or the cost of living). To measure inflation, we look at changes in the price of a market basket of goods or services households typically purchase with their income Time prices
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4 We use the CPI to measure changes in the cost of living experienced by households. 4 The CPI is the “narrow” price index in that the market basket used to construct it includes items purchased by households. 4 The inflation rate is simply the percentage change in the CPI from one period to the next.
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How would we calculate the inflation rate for, say, the year 1990?
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On average, the prices of goods and services in the CPI market basket increased by 5.4 % from 1989 to 1990
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We want to examine the following issues : What are the costs of inflation? Is there a tradeoff between inflation and unemployment? Assuming there is a tradeoff between inflation and unemployment, can unemployment be “too low”? Why is it that once inflation starts, it tends to persist? Is monetary expansion to blame for inflation?
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Inflation is a drag! ³Inflation results in the arbitrary and inequitable distribution of real income and wealth. ³Inflation creates an opportunity to profit from non-productive speculative activities. ³Inflation affects expectations about future increases in the cost-of-living, giving rise to inflation inertia. ³Inflation distorts the information conveyed by market prices (including wages). ³Inflation undermines confidence in economic and political institutions.
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Lenders Taxpayers Holders of currency People on fixed incomes With the cost-of-living rising, what I have here is losing value by the hour We mortgage lenders got creamed in the 70s and early 80s
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Has the growth of my income kept pace with the cost of living? Is my wealth concentrated in assets that tend to hold their value in an inflationary environment? I am in debt? Precious metals, rare art, and commercial real estate are good plays if you expect inflation A lot of people lost money in the stock market in the 70s
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Ave. Income of Seattle Transit Employees The question is: were they better off in 1996 in terms of real purchasing power?
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Are Seattle transit employees any better off, at least based on these figures?
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