Inflation: the increase in the overall level of prices
Deflation: the decrease in the overall level prices
Hyperinflation: an extremely high rate of inflation
30-1 The Classical Theory of Inflation
The Level of Prices and the Value of Money
Thinking of the price of a basket of goods and services, people have to pay more for the goods and services they buy.
However, you can assume the price level as a measure of the value of money: a rise in the price level means a lower value of money. The opposite is true
Money Supply, Money Demand, and Monetary Equilibrium
The demand for money reflects how much people value liquidity
Reliance on credit cards, etc
The average level of prices in the economy affects the demand for money
In the long run, money supply and money demand are brought into equilibrium by the overall level of prices
At the equilibrium price level, the quantity of money wanted to be held = the quantity of money supplied by the Fed
This equilibrium of money supply and money demand determines the value of money and the price level
The Effects of a Monetary Injection
Quantity theory of money: a theory asserting that the quantity of money available determines the price level and that the growth rate in the quantity of money available determines the inflation rate
The main cause of inflation is money being printed (a growth in quantity)
A Brief Look at the Adjustment Process
A monetary injection creates an excess supply of money
The supply of money is decreased by the buying of goods, services, or loaning of money. More money increases the demand for goods and services
The overall price level for goods and services adjusts to bring money supply and money demand into balance
The Classical Dichotomy and Monetary Neutrality
Nominal variables: variables measured in monetary units
Real variables: variables measured in physical units
Classical dichotomy: the theoretical separation of nominal variables and real variables
A dichotomy is a division into two groups
A relative price is the price of one thing in terms of another
Monetary neutrality: the proposition that changes in the money supply do not affect real variables
Money neutrality is not realistic in the short run, but, it will be realistic in the long run
Velocity and the Quantity Equation
Velocity of money: the rate at which money changes hands
To calculate the velocity of money, follow the equation: V = (P*Y)/M
P=price level (GDP deflator)
Y=quantity of output (real GDP)
M=quantity of money
V=Velocity
This can also be written as: MV = PY
Quantity equation: MV = PY which relates the quantity of money, the velocity of money, and the dollar value of the economy’s output of goods and services
5 main points:
The velocity of money is stable in the long run
The quantity of M is proportionate to (P*Y) (the nominal value of output)
Y (goods & service output) are determined by factor supplies.
When the central bank alters M and is proportionate to (P*Y), there is a change in P
When the central bank increases the money supply rapidly, there is a high rate of inflation
The Inflation Tax
Inflation tax: the revenue the government raises by creating money
The inflation tax is like a tax on everyone who holds money
Hyperinflation ends when the government institutes fiscal reforms that eliminate the need for inflation tax
The Fisher Effect
The nominal interest rate is a typical bank interest rate.
The real interest rate corrects the nominal interest rate for inflation. It refers to the purchasing power
Real interest rate = Nominal interest rate - Inflation rate
Nominal interest rate = Real interest rate + Inflation rate
When the Fed increases the rate of money growth, the long-run result is both a higher inflation rate and a higher nominal interest rate
Fisher effect: the one-for-one adjustment of the nominal interest rate to the inflation rate. This doesn’t hold in the short run because inflation does not follow a typical pattern in the short run, but it does in the long run
30-2 The Costs of Inflation
A Fall in Purchasing Power? The Inflation Fallacy
Inflation does not in itself reduce people’s real purchasing power
Shoeleather Costs
Tax is not a cost to society, it only transfers resources from households to the government
Shoeleather costs: the resources wasted when inflation encourages people to reduce their money holdings
Shoeleather costs can be large and can be considered wasted resources
Menu Costs
Menu costs: the costs of changing prices
This includes deciding, changing in distribution, and advertising new prices
Inflation increases menu costs, especially during hyperinflations
Relative-Price Variability and the Misallocation of Resources
Market companies rely on relative prices to allocate scare reasons
Consumers use relative prices
When inflation distorts relative prices, consumers are more mislead and markets adjust slowly
Inflation-Induced Tax Distortions
Capital gains are the profits made by selling an asset for more than its purchase price
The income tax treats the nominal interest earned on savings as income
Confusion and Inconvenience
Both tax code and accountants incorrectly measure real incomes with inflation
Inflation makes investors less able at differentiating successful with less successful firms
A Special Cost of Unexpected Inflation: Arbitrary Redistributions of Wealth
Unexpected changes in price redistribute wealth among debtors and creditors
Low average inflation is more stable than high average inflation
There are redistributions of wealth when unexpected inflation occurs
Inflation Is Bad, but Deflation May Be Worse
Deflation lowers the nominal interest rate, which reduces the cost of holding money
Deflation is rarely steady and predictable and comes as a surprise