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Inflation Definition, types and causes of inflation

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Page 1: Inflation

Inflation

Definition, types and causes of inflation

Page 2: Inflation

Areas to focus on

Page 3: Inflation

What Is Inflation?• Inflation is an increase in the average level of prices, not a

change in any specific price.• Inflation is a phenomenon whereby general price level rises

persistently. • According to Prof. Crowther,• “Inflation is a state in which the value of the money falls and

price level persistently rises.”• Prof. Ackly, “inflation is a persistent and appreciable rise in

the general value of average prices”.• Prof. Piguo, “inflation takes place when price level expands

more proportion to output”.

Page 4: Inflation

Types of inflation on the basis of inflation rate

• Creeping inflation• A situation in which the rise in general price level is at a

very slow rate over a period of time. Under creeping inflation, the price level rises up to a rate of 2 percent per annum. A mild inflation is generally considered a necessary condition of economic growth.

• Walking inflation. Walking inflation is a marked increase in the rate of inflation as compared to creeping inflation. The price rise is around 5 percent annually.

Page 5: Inflation

Continued….

• Running inflation. Under running inflation, the price increase is about 8 to 10 percent per annum.

• Galloping or Hyper Inflation. Galloping inflation is a full inflation. Keynes calls it as the final stage of inflation. It is a stage of inflation which starts after the level of full employment is reached. Here price level rises very rapidly within a short period.

Page 6: Inflation

Social Tensions

• Tensions between labor and management, between government and the people, and among consumers may overwhelm a society and its institutions.

Page 7: Inflation

Money Illusion

• The use of nominal Rupee rather than real to gauge changes in one’s income or wealth is called the money illusion.

Page 8: Inflation

Macro Consequences

• Inflation can alter the rate and mixes of output by changing consumption, work, saving, investment, and trade behavior.

Page 9: Inflation

Uncertainty

• People tend to shorten their time horizons in the face of inflation uncertainties.

• Time horizons are shortened as people attempt to spend money before it loses further value.

Page 10: Inflation

Speculation

• Few people will engage in production if it is easy to make speculative profits.

• Such speculation may fuel hyperinflation.– Hyperinflation is an inflation rate in excess of

200 percent, lasting at least one year.

Page 11: Inflation

Bracket Creep

• Bracket creep is the movement of taxpayers into higher tax brackets (rates) as nominal incomes grow.

Page 12: Inflation

Deflation Dangers

• Deflation — a falling price level — might not make people happy either.

• Deflation reverses the redistributions caused by inflation.

• Lenders win and creditors lose.

Page 13: Inflation

Measuring Inflation

• Measuring inflation serves two purposes:– Gauges the average rate of inflation.– Identifies its principal victims.

Page 14: Inflation

Causes of Inflation

• The cause of inflation is rooted in supply and demand.

Page 15: Inflation

Demand-Pull Inflation

• Demand-pull inflation results from excessive pressure on the demand side of the economy.

• “Too much money chases too few goods” enabling producers to raise prices.

Page 16: Inflation

Cost-Push Inflation

• The pressure on price could also originate on the supply side.

• Higher production costs put upward pressure on product prices.