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deflation

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.09 sec.
Deflation
A general decline in prices, often caused by a reduction in the supply of money or credit. Deflation can be caused also by a decrease in government, personal or investment spending. The opposite of inflation, deflation has the side effect of increased unemployment since there is a lower level of demand in the economy, which can lead to an economic depression.

Notes:
Declining prices, if they persist, generally create a vicious spiral of negatives such as falling profits, closing factories, shrinking employment and incomes, and increasing defaults on loans by companies and individuals. To counter deflation, the Federal Reserve (the Fed) can use monetary policy to increase the money supply and deliberately induce rising prices, causing inflation. Rising prices provide an essential lubricant for any sustained recovery because businesses increase profits and take some of the depressive pressures off wages and debtors of every kind.


Deflation
Decline in the prices of goods and services. Antithesis of inflation.

deflation
A reduction in consumer or wholesale prices. The term generally applies to more than just a temporary decline. Compare inflation. See also disinflation.

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This bunker mentality seems to be an abiding concern that years and years of deflation seemed to have planted in the Japanese business psyche.
One argument for such a policy is that deflation provides consumers with an incentive to postpone purchases since the same product will be cheaper in the future.
But the central banking elite has defined deflation as a scourge, and inflation as the remedy.
 
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