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ECON 3212 – Exam 2 Study Guide: Inflation and Interest Rates
ECON 3212 – Exam 2 Study Guide: Inflation and Interest Rates
Price Level and Inflation
Price Level (Index)
: Measures the average prices of goods and services in an economy.
Inflation
: A rise in the overall price level, resulting in a reduction of purchasing power.
Inflation Rate Formula
Formula
: To calculate the inflation rate, use the formula:
(New - Old) / Old \times 100
Represents the annual percentage change in price level.
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
CPI
: Represents the average price of a market "basket" of goods purchased by a typical urban family of four.
Biases in CPI
Substitution Bias
: CPI assumes consumers buy the same quantity of goods, ignoring substitutions made for cheaper goods.
Quality Change Bias
: CPI does not account for improvements in the quality of goods over time.
New Product Bias
: CPI does not immediately capture the impact of new products on the market.
Outlet Bias
: Data collection for CPI often overlooks sales from discount and outlet stores.
Other Inflation Measures
PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures)
: Measures domestic purchases by households and is used by the Fed for price measurement.
Core PCE
: Excludes volatile food and energy prices for more stable measurement.
PPI (Producer Price Index)
: Indicates the price producers pay at different production stages and can signal future price changes.
Interest Rates
Nominal Interest Rate (i)
: The stated interest rate without adjustment for inflation; reflects the opportunity cost of holding money.
Real Interest Rate
Real Interest Rate (r)
: The true cost of borrowing after adjusting for inflation, given by the formula:
r = i - \pi
Fisher Equation
: Relates nominal interest rate, real interest rate, and inflation.
i = r + \pi
Fisher Effect
: Indicates that a 1% increase in money supply results in a 1% increase in inflation, which also raises nominal interest rates.
Real Interest Rates Explained
Ex Ante Real Interest Rate
: The anticipated real interest rate at the start of a loan, given by:
r = i - E\pi
Ex Post Real Interest Rate
: The actual real interest rate realized after the loan repayment, calculated as:
r = i - \pi
Example Calculation
If you want to buy a car with a 5.25% interest rate, expecting 3% inflation:
Ex Ante
: 5.25\% - 3\% = 2.25\%
After 5 years, if actual inflation averages 4%:
Ex Post
: 5.25\% - 4\% = 1.25\%
Costs of Expected Inflation
Inflation Tax
: Erosion of cash and bond values, leading to more withdrawals.
Menu Costs
: Costs associated with changing prices.
Price Changes
: Regular price changes become complex amid higher inflation.
Tax Liability
: Inflation may alter tax obligations without accounting adjustments.
Need for Adjustment
: Inflation complicates long-term financial planning, particularly retirement.
Costs of Unexpected Inflation
Redistribution of Wealth
: Affects borrowers and lenders differently based on actual vs. expected inflation:
If \pi > E\pi , borrowers benefit.
If \pi < E\pi , lenders benefit.
Fixed Income Recipients
: Individuals on fixed incomes face difficulties when inflation rises unexpectedly.
Example Scenario
Consider a 30-year mortgage at a nominal 3% interest rate:
Expected inflation: 2%
Realized inflation: 3%
Ex Ante
: r = 3\% - 2\% = 1\%
Ex Post
: r = 3\% - 3\% = 0\%
Outcome might leave you disappointed.
Comparing Inflation, Deflation, and Disinflation
Inflation
: Continuous rising prices; preferable to deflation.
Deflation
: Decreasing prices, which can be harmful economically.
Disinflation
: Slowdown in inflation; prices rise at a decreasing rate (e.g., from 6% to 4%).
Impact on Workers and Real Wages
Workers resist nominal wage cuts. As prices rise, real wages decline unless nominal wages increase accordingly.
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