Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byHubert Short Modified over 9 years ago
1
MEASURING PRICE CHANGES AND INTEREST RATES INTERESTED IN HOW THE AVERAGE OF PRICES IS CHANGING – NOT HOW INDIVIDUAL PRICES ARE CHANGING INFLATION – AVERAGE IS RISING DEFLATION – AVERAGE IS FALLING DISINFLATION – AVERAGE IS RISING BUT AT SUCCESSIVELY LOWER RATES; EG, 6% TO 4% TO 2%
2
SIDEBAR – WHY AREN’T FALLING PRICES (DEFLATION) GOOD? NOT GOOD DURING A RECESSION – MAKES PEOPLE DELAY SPENDING HOPING FOR LOWER PRICES BAD FOR DEBTORS – DEFLATION INCREASES THE PURCHASING POWER OF DOLLARS AND THEREFORE MAKES BOTH DEBT AND DEBT PAYMENTS MORE EXPENSIVE
3
THREE MEASURES OF INFLATION AT CONSUMER RETAIL LEVEL – CONSUMER PRICE INDEX (CPI) AT BUSINESS LEVEL – PRODUCER PRICE INDEX (PPI) COMBINED CONSUMER AND PRODUCER LEVELS – “IMPLICIT PRICE DEFLATOR” (IPD)
4
ON CPI – TOTAL AND CORE RATE TOTAL – INCORPORATES ALL PRODUCTS AND SERVICES CORE – EXCLUDES VOLATILE FOOD AND ENERGY PRICES
5
PROBLEMS IN MEASURING INFLATION KEEPING UP WITH CHANGING BUYING HABITS INCORPORATING NEW PRODUCTS AND SERVICES ACCOUNTING FOR QUALITY CHANGES OF PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
6
INTEREST RATES AGAIN TEND TO BE “PROCYCLICAL” – HIGHER WHEN ECONOMY IS GROWING, AND LOWER WHEN ECONOMY IS IN A RECESSION LONG-TERM RATES SHORT-TERM RATES
7
INVERTED (NEGATIVE) YIELD CURVE LONG RATES ARE USUALLY HIGHER THAN SHORT RATES – MORE RISK BUT SOMETIMES SHORT RATES ARE HIGHER – CALLED AN “INVERTED (OR NEGATIVE) YIELD CURVE” – GOOD PREDICTOR OF AN ON-COMING RECESSION
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.