Multiple Choice

An economy's inflation is determined by the sum of what people expect inflation to be and the 'bargaining gap' that reflects workers' negotiating power. This relationship holds because it is assumed that firms set prices based solely on their labor costs. Consider a scenario where expected inflation is 3% and a strong labor market creates a positive bargaining gap of 2%. If a sudden, separate global event causes the cost of imported raw materials to rise for all firms, what will be the resulting inflation rate?

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Updated 2025-08-15

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