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inflation |
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Inflation The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services is rising.
Inflation. Inflation is a persistent increase in prices, often triggered when demand for goods is greater than the available supply or when unemployment is low and workers can command higher salaries. Moderate inflation typically accompanies economic growth. But the US Federal Reserve Bank and central banks in other nations try to keep inflation in check by decreasing the money supply, making it more difficult to borrow and thus slowing expansion. Hyperinflation, when prices rise by 100% or more annually, can destroy economic, and sometimes political, stability by driving the price of necessities higher than people can afford. Deflation, in contrast, is a widespread decline in prices that also has the potential to undermine the economy by stifling production and increasing unemployment. inflation A loss in the purchasing power of money. Inflation is generally measured by the consumer price index. Inflation What Does Inflation Mean? The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises and, subsequently, purchasing power falls; investors can track the direction of inflation by monitoring the Consumer Price Index (CPI). Investopedia explains Inflation As inflation rises, every dollar will buy a smaller percentage of a good. For example, if the inflation rate is 2%, a $1 pack of gum will cost $1.02 in a year. Most countries' central banks try to sustain an inflation rate of 2 to 3%. Related Terms: How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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The current system," writes Brown University economist William Poole in the journal Jobs & Capital, "depends almost entirely on the good sense and good management of the Federal Reserve and on the Fed's political skills in heading off the inflationist tendencies that exist in every Congress and every administration. The conservative line on Keynesian economics was that it was inflationist, socialist, or worse. |
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