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Chapter 11: Inflation
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Inflation A continuous rise of the general price level General price level is measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI): The weighted average price of 400 goods & services sold in urban areas around the nation.
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Inflation Rate Percentage change of the CPI over the previous period Inflation stayed under 5% during the 1960s It averaged 7.7% in the first half and 10.6% in the second half of the 1970s Since the early 1980s, inflation rate has declined to as low as 3% in the late 1990s
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Demand-Pull Inflation Inflation caused by an increase in the level of Aggregate Demand (1960s) At full employment, expansion of the Aggregate Demand is inflationary with no additional output
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Price Level Output of Goods & Services 105 110 200400 S S D1 Full employment output 120 D2 D3 Demand-Pull Inflation
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Cost-Push Inflation Inflation caused by an decrease in the level of Aggregate Supply (1970s & early 1980s) Higher general price level and falling output of goods & services result in stagflation, inflation plus stagnation
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Cost-Push Inflation Price Level Output of Goods & Services 105 110 200400 S1 S D D Full employment output S2 115 50 S3
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Effects of Inflation Equity effect: changing the pattern of income distribution from wage-earners to profit-makers Efficiency effect: requiring greater investment in hedging against inflation in labor & business contracts Output effect: recession resulting from cost-push inflation
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Functions of Money Medium of Exchange Measure of Value Store of Value
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Characteristics of Money Limited in supply Widely accepted Portable Divisible Uniform Durable
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Money Supply Narrow definition: M1 –Currency: coins & bills (25%) –Demand Deposits: checking account deposits (75%)
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Money Supply Broad definition: M2 –M1 –Time Deposits: savings account deposits (less than $100,000)
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Money Supply Line The quantity of money in circulation is controlled by the central bank Quantity of Money Interest Rate (%) S S 80 5 10
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Money Demand The amount of money demanded for transaction and speculative purposes depends: personal income and interest rate At any level of personal income, quantity demanded of money is a negative function of interest rate
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Money Demand Line Quantity of Money Interest Rate (%) D D 10 5 100 80
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Money Market Equilibrium Quantity of Money Interest Rate (%) D D 5 80 S S
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Federal Reserve System, FED The central bank of the U.S. Independent decision making unit with regional banks In charge of money supply management and economic stabilization
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Tools of Monetary Policy Legal reserve ratio: ratio of cash reserves to deposits that banks are required to maintain By lowering the ratio, banks will have more reserves to lend and invest, increasing the money supply
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Tools of Monetary Policy Discount rate: rate of interest the FED charges on loans to banks By lowering the rate, banks encourage borrowing from the FED and lending to the public, increasing the money supply
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Tools of Monetary Policy Open Market Operations: FED’s purchases and sales of government bonds By purchasing bonds and paying the sellers, the FED increases the money supply
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Expansionary Monetary Policy Increase the money supply by any one or combination of the above tools Reduce the interest rate to encourage investment Increase Aggregate Demand, creating employment & income
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Expansionary Monetary Policy Quantity of Money Interest Rate (%) D D 5 80 S S S’ 4 85
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Quantity Theory of Money Equation of Exchange: MV = PQ –M = money supply –V = income velocity of money: the rate of turn over of money –P = general price level –Q = output of goods & services
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Quantity Theory of Money Write: P = (V/Q) M Assuming V, Q, and V/Q constant, an increase in M causes a proportional increase in P Inflation is caused by a rapid growth of the money supply
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Money Supply Growth & Inflation In 1960s, inflation was low and money supply growth constant at about 7% In the 1970s, inflation rose as the money supply grew at an increasing arte to reach 10% In the 1980s and 1990s, inflation fell as money supply grew at a declining rate to reach about 6%
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