inflation
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
inflation in economics, persistent and relatively large increase in the general price level of goods and services. Its opposite is deflation, a process of generally declining prices. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics produces the Consumer Price Index (CPI) yearly, which measures average price changes in relation to prices in an arbitrarily selected base year. While the CPI is usually considered the most reliable estimate of inflation, some economists have questioned whether it overstates inflationary trends.
Inflation results from an increase in the amount of circulating currency beyond the needs of trade; an oversupply of currency is created, and, in accordance with the law of supply and demand, the value of money decreases. Deflation is brought about by the opposite condition. In the past, inflation was often due to a large influx of bullion, such as took place in Europe after the discovery of America and at the end of the 19th cent. when new supplies of gold were found and exploited in South Africa. In modern times wars are the most common cause of inflation, as government borrowing, the increase in the money supply, and a diminished supply of consumer goods increase demand relative to supply and thereby cause rising prices.
Inflation stimulates business and helps wages to rise, but the increase in wages usually fails to match the increase in prices; hence, real wages diminish. Stockholders make gains—often illusory—from increased business profits, but bondholders lose because their fixed percentage return has less buying power. Borrowers also gain from inflation, since the future value of money is reduced. Deflation, which historically has occurred in the downward movement of the business cycle, lowers prices and increases unemployment through the depression of business. Persistent deflation in Japan, beginning in the early 1990s, has resulted in a drop in consumption, record unemployment, and general economic stagnation. An unusually steep and sudden rise in prices, sometimes called hyperinflation, may result in the eventual breakdown of an entire nation's monetary system. The most notable example is Germany (1923), where prices rose 2,500% in one month.
In the United States, annual price increases of less than about 2% or 3% are not considered indicative of serious inflation. During the early 1970s, however, prices rose by considerably higher percentages, leading President Nixon to implement wage-and-price controls in 1971. Stagflation-the combination of high unemployment and economic stagnation with inflation-became common in the industrialized countries during the 1970s. The costs of the Vietnam War and the social programs of the Johnson administration, plus the oil prices increases in 1974 by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), contributed to U.S. inflation. By the end of the 1970s the Federal Reserve raised interest rates in an attempt to reduce inflation. Following a recession in the early 1980s, there was renewed growth, somewhat lower interest rates, and a decrease in the inflation rate.
During the early 1990s, a downward business turn created an international recession—without significant deflation—that replaced inflation as a major problem; the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates to stimulate economic growth. The mid-1990s saw moderate inflation (2.5%-3.1% annually), even with an increase in interest rates. By the late 1990s, U.S. inflation was low (1.9% by 1998), despite record growth; it has tended to be somewhat higher (roughly 2%-3.5%) in subsequent years, due largely to increases in energy costs and, to a lesser degree, to large government deficits since 2001.
Bibliography: See J. Ahmad, Floating Exchange Rates and World Inflation (1984); A. J. Brown, World Inflation Since 1950 (1985); T. S. Sargent, The Conquest of American Inflation (1999).
Author not available, INFLATION.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Chapter IV: Does inflation targeting work in emerging markets?
World Economic Outlook; 9/1/2005; Batini, Nicoletta Kuttner, Kenneth Laxton, Douglas Goretti, Manuela; 15484 words;
... All of the countries that have adopted inflation targeting have had some experience with high inflation, and the move to an inflation targeting regime was seen as an important step to anchor inflation expectations durably once a track record had been established. Indeed, when an inflation ...
|
|
The relationship between inflation expectations survey data and inflation.(relationship between surveyed inflation expectations and inflation in New Zealand )
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand; 12/1/2003; Ranchhod, Satish; 7356 words;
Inflation expectations play an important role in shaping the inflation consequences of economic activity. Hence, they are of special importance for monetary policy. Survey measures of inflation expectations are available, but whether they are a good ...
|
|
Chapter III: How has globalization affected inflation?
World Economic Outlook; 4/1/2006; Helbing, Thomas Jaumotte, Florence Sommer, Martin Ball, Laurence Espiritu, Angela; 19411 words;
Inflation in advanced and many emerging market economies has remained remarkably subdued ... currency areas. Is this situation sustainable or does it foreshadow unwelcome inflation surprises in the near future? Some analysts have argued that low and stable inflation reflects more intense global competition, ...
|
|
Origins of the Great Inflation/Commentary
Review - Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; 3/1/2005; Meltzer, Allan H; Romer, Christina D; 24015 words;
... arguments. Robertson said that inflation was not inevitable. Higher ... 16). Neglecting 2 percent inflation, he warned the Board that ... dismissed current concerns about inflation. If inflation rose, the Board could act ... maintain price stability. A news story describing the ...
|
|
Inflation forecasts and monetary policy.(Dynamic Effects of Monetary Policy)
Journal of Money, Credit & Banking; 11/1/1997; Bernanke, Ben S. Woodford, Michael; 15855 words;
... possibilities arise: In particular, complete inflation and output stabilization (an equilibrium ... Furthermore, this way of stabilizing inflation is superior to the use of a rule of the ... effects of forecast noise on output and inflation will be bounded. Thus the points developed ... of strict targeting of ...
|
|
America's Historical Experience with Low Inflation.
Journal of Money, Credit & Banking; 11/1/2000; DELONG, J. BRADFORD Bernanke, Ben S. English, William B.; 11379 words;
... correlation between high productivity and low inflation is guaranteed by the identity that quantity ... economic history is of no help. As long as inflation remains moderate, there is no chance ... macroeconomic level running from lower inflation to faster productivity growth. Nevertheless ... it is there ...
|
|
The inverted fisher hypothesis: Inflation forecastability and asset substitution.
IMF Staff Papers; 7/1/2002; Choi, Woon Gyu; 14784 words;
This paper examines the implications of inflation persistence for the inverted I Fisher ... real interest rate is not affected by inflation because of the substitutability between ... nominal interest rate does not adjust to inflation, with the real interest rate moving inversely ...
|
|
What starts inflation: evidence from the OECD countries.
Journal of Money, Credit & Banking; 6/1/2003; Boschen, John F. Weise, Charles L.; 10817 words;
REPEATED EPISODES OF moderate inflation were a central characteristic of many ... during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. This inflation experience is documented in Figure 1, which plots trend inflation for 19 OECD countries since 1960. (1 ...
|
|
Do Inflation Targeters Outperform Non-targeters?
Review - Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; 9/1/2006; Dueker, Michael J; Fischer, Andreas M; 7605 words;
Ten years of empirical studies of inflation targeting have not uncovered clear evidence ... incorporates formal targets imparts better inflation performance. The authors survey the literature ... the "no difference" verdict concerning inflation targeting has been robust to a wide range ...
|
|
Panel Discussion: Inflation Targeting
Review - Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; 7/1/2004; Bernanke, Ben S; Issing, Otmar; Kohn, Donald L; 13736 words;
... objective. STRESS-TESTING MY SKEPTICISM-WOULD INFLATION TARGETING HAVE IMPROVED ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ... even if such an outcome were possible. Inflation was edging lower through much of this ... tends to emphasize the performance of inflation in consumer goods and services over the ... FOMC statement of May ...
|
|
THE DECLINE OF INFLATION IN EMERGING MARKETS: CAN IT BE MAINTAINED?(Statistical Data Included)
World Economic Outlook; 5/1/2001; 16167 words;
... have witnessed a dramatic decline in inflation in emerging market economies. [1] By the end of 2000, average inflation in emerging markets had declined from ... Venezuela (Table 4.1). Such low levels of inflation have not been seen since before World ...
|
|
Discovering the link between inflation rates and inflation uncertainty.
Journal of Money, Credit & Banking; 5/1/1991; Evans, Martin; 6110 words;
Discovering the Link between Inflation Rates and Inflation Uncertainty IT IS WIDELY BELIEVED THAT moderated rates of inflation impose significant economic costs on society through increased inflation uncertainty. In fact many policymakers and economists ...
|
|
Treasury inflation-indexed debt: a review of the U.S. experience.
Federal Reserve Bank of New York Economic Policy Review; 5/1/2004; Sack, Brian Elsasser, Robert; 10624 words;
* Treasury inflation-indexed securities (TIIS) have yet to ... well below survey measures of long-run inflation expectations. * This study attributes ... investors may have had a benign outlook for inflation and inflation risks. * More recently ...
|
|
Conducting Monetary Policy With Inflation Targets.(Statistical Data Included)
Economic Review (Kansas City); 6/22/1998; Kahn, George A. Parrish, Klara; 11454 words;
I. RATIONALE FOR AND KEY FEATURES OF INFLATION TARGETING Central banks have adopted inflation targets as a strategy for achieving, and then maintaining, price stability. Inflation targeting regimes share several common features. This section describes ...
|
|
Practical Problems and Obstacles to Inflation Targeting/Commentary
Review - Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; 7/1/2004; Meyer, Laurence H; Svensson, Lars E O; 9286 words;
... conferences, papers, and speeches on inflation targeting suggests a growing interest ... adopting an explicit numerical objective for inflation. Because the devil is often in the details ... FOMC were to adopt an explicit numerical inflation target, the vision of the resulting regime ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Canada. (Part V)(Inflation targeting: lessons from four countries.)
Federal Reserve Bank of New York Economic Policy Review; 8/1/1997; Mishkin, Frederic S. Posen, Adam S.; 12079 words;
|
Do inflation targeters outperform non-targeters?
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review; 9/1/2006; Dueker, Michael J. Fischer, Andreas M.; 8748 words;
|
Practical problems and obstacles to inflation targeting.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review; 7/1/2004; Meyer, Laurence; 9577 words;
|
The macroeconomic effects of inflation targeting.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review; 7/1/2004; Levin, Andrew T. Natalucci, Fabio M. Piger, Jeremy M.; 17231 words;
|
Evolving inflation dynamics and the New Keynesian Phillips Curve.
Economic Quarterly; 9/22/2007; Hornstein, Andreas; 8180 words;
|
Instability in U.S. inflation: 1967-2005.
Economic Review (Atlanta, Ga.); 4/1/2006; Nason, James M.; 9028 words;
|
Inflation targeting and optimal monetary policy.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review; 7/1/2004; Woodford, Michael; 24880 words;
|
Inflation and monetary policy in the twentieth century.
Economic Perspectives; 3/22/2003; Christiano, Lawrence J. Fitzgerald, Terry J.; 13015 words;
|
Inflation and changing expenditure shares.
Economic Quarterly; 1/1/2005; Wolman, Alexander L. Ding, Fan; 5446 words;
|
The changing dynamics of inflation: expectation of stability tend to be a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Business Economics; 7/1/2007; Kroszner, Randall S.; 5185 words;
|
|
|