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Inflation

Inflation. Overview. The causes of inflation Types of inflation The costs of inflation Ways to control inflation Consumer Price Index - CPI. Inflation: Its Causes and Costs.

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Inflation

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  1. Inflation

  2. Overview • The causes of inflation • Types of inflation • The costs of inflation • Ways to control inflation • Consumer Price Index - CPI

  3. Inflation: Its Causes and Costs • Inflation is a sustained increase in the price level. It is a continuous increase versus a “once-and-for-all” increase in prices. • Inflation deals with the increase in the average of prices and not just significant increases in the price of a few goods.

  4. Types of inflation • Demand –Pull Inflation • Cost Push inflation

  5. Cost – push inflation Sustained increase in price of goods and services, caused by the passing off of increased production costs to the consumers by the producers. Also called cost inflation, it is the opposite of demand-pull inflation.

  6. Demand – Pull Inflation Sustained increase in the prices of goods and services resulting from a high demand, stimulated by easy credit and hire purchase offers accompanied by insufficient supplies. In general, more inflation is caused by demand-pull factors than by cost-push factors. Also called demand inflation, it is the opposite of cost-push inflation.

  7. Ways to control inflation

  8. Monetary policy Definition • Economic strategy chosen by a government in deciding expansion or contraction in the country's money-supply. Applied usually through the central bank,

  9. Monetary Policy Monetary policy employs three major tools: • Buying or selling national debt. • Changing credit restrictions. • Changing the interest rates by changing reserve requirements. Monetary policy plays the dominant role in control of the aggregate-demand and, by extension, of inflation in an economy.

  10. National Debt Total outstanding borrowings of a central government comprising of internal (owing to national creditors) and external (owing to foreign creditors) debt incurred in financing its expenditure.

  11. National Debt National debt is divided generally into three categories: • Floating debt, short term borrowings such as treasury bills, various ways-and-means advances, and borrowings from the central bank. • Funded debt, short-term debt converted into long-term debt. • Unfunded debt, national savings certificates, savings bonds, premium bonds, and securities repayable in foreign exchange (payment of which affects the country's balance of payments).

  12. Reserve Requirements Minimum amount of cash or cash-equivalents (computed as a percentage of deposits) that banks and other depository institutions, are required by law to keep on hand, and which may not be used for lending or investing.

  13. Reserve Requirements Reserve requirements serve as : • Safeguard against a sudden and inordinate demand for withdrawals (as in a run on a bank). • Control mechanism for injecting cash (liquidity) into, or withdrawing it from, an economy.

  14. Money Supply and Money Demand • Money Supply is a variable of the Reserve Bank of a country. Through instruments such as open market operations, the RB directly controls the quantity of money supplied. • Money Demand has several determinants including: • interest rates • average level of prices in the economy

  15. Money Supply and Money Demand • People hold money because it is the medium of exchange. The amount of money people choose to hold depends on the prices of the goods and services. • In the long-run, the overall level of prices adjusts to the level at which the demand for money equals the supply.

  16. Hyperinflation • Hyperinflation is inflation that exceeds 50 percent per month. • Hyperinflation in some countries is caused because the government prints too much money to pay for their spending. • Zimbabwe’s inflation rate went up to 3,731.9% !

  17. Index numbers

  18. Objectives • To explain how index numbers are calculated • To explain their limitations in calculating inflation

  19. Consumer Price Index (CPI) • Used to calculate inflation by measuring the price changes in a basket of goods in comparison with a base year. • Allows comparisons across both time and countries.

  20. How does this link with inflation? • Weighing • Changes over time • Is only an average. • What should be included?

  21. Problems with measuring the CPI • Basket of goods represents typical household and may not represent ALL households. • There may be errors in the data as well as the collecting of the data. • Changes needs to be made regularly to reflect changing spending patterns • Different countries measure inflation differently. • Prices may vary for a variety of reasons not just inflation. • CPI only measures changes ion consumer prices.

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