6.1 Price Inflation: Igcse /O Level Economics
6.1 Price Inflation: Igcse /O Level Economics
6.1 Price Inflation: Igcse /O Level Economics
© Brian Titley 2012: this may be reproduced for class use solely for the purchaser’s institute
What is inflation?
Inflation is a general and sustained rise in
the level of prices of goods and services
i.e. prices of the vast majority of goods and
services keep on rising
9 October 2008
its
Zimbabwe inflation h
Some countries have experienced
hyperinflation in the past: runaway
231 million per cent inflation during which prices rise at
cost Z$500 at the
A loaf of bread, which phenomenal rates and money becomes
w costs
beginning of August, no
between Z$7,000 and Z$
10,000 almost worthless
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How to measure inflation
There are many millions of different goods and
services exchanged in an economy, so most
countries track the prices of a selection of goods
and services to construct a price index
Year 0 (base year)
•Identify the basket of goods and services
purchased by the ‘typical’ family
•Monitor the ‘average’ price of each item in the
basket at a sample of different retail outlets
•Monitor how much the ‘typical’ family spends on
each item in the basket
Year 1 onwards
•Weight the average price of each item by the
•Repeat the monitoring of household spending
proportion of household expenditure spent on it
patterns and prices
•Add up all the weighted average prices
•Compare the total weighted average price of the
•Set the total weighted average price of the basket basket to base year to calculate the change in the
equal to 100 price index
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Calculating a consumer price index
Price of basket was $25 in base year, so annual inflation has been 8%, i.e.
Note: The basket of goods and services bought and the weights applied to each item in
the basket may change from year to year as products and spending patterns change
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RPI or CPI?
Most countries compile a
consumer price index
(CPI) or a retail price
index (RPI), or both
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Uses of price indices
As an economic indicator
A consumer or retail price index is a widely used measure of price inflation
and therefore a measure of changes in the cost of living
As a price deflator
Rising prices reduce the purchasing power of wages, profits, pensions,
savings, tax revenues, and a host of other economic variables of
importance to different groups of people and decision makers. A price index
is therefore used to calculate changes in their real values over time
For indexation
Indexation involves increasing certain payments and values, such as state
pensions and income tax thresholds, by the annual rate of increase in price
inflation in order to keep their real value constant
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What causes inflation?
Economists today tend to agree that the main cause of inflation is ‘too much
money chasing too few goods’
i.e. if the money supply increases at a faster rate than the aggregate supply
of goods and services then the general level of prices will rise
The money supply may expand to meet demand and cost pressures ►
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Demand-pull or cost-push inflation?
A demand-pull inflation is caused by aggregate demand rising faster than
the aggregate supply of goods and services
A cost-push inflation is caused by rising wages and other production costs.
Firms will raise their prices to cover these additional costs
A rise in import prices may cause an imported inflation. Import prices may
rise following a fall in the exchange rate of the importing country
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The costs of inflation
Low and stable price inflation can be beneficial for an economy:
It encourages consumers to buy goods and services sooner rather than later
It reduces the real cost of loan repayments
Stagflation: an economic situation when unemployment and inflation are both high and/or rising
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What is deflation?
▼ Japanese inflation, 1970–2010 (% annual change in CPI)
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So what’s so bad about falling prices?
Increasing supply, competition, productivity and technological advance are good things for
an economy and consumers, and have reduced the prices of many products over time,
such as mobile phones, televisions, cars, holidays and clothing, in many countries
However, when falling product prices become widespread and prolonged due to a slump
in aggregate demand, the result is malign deflation
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