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Effect of Expected Inflation on the Phillips Curve
When workers and firms anticipate higher inflation, the Phillips curve shifts upward. This means that for any given level of unemployment, a higher rate of inflation will occur, as wage and price-setting behavior incorporates these heightened inflationary expectations.
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Economics
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.4 Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
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Effect of Expected Inflation on the Phillips Curve
Incorporating Expected Inflation into Nominal Wage Demands
Consider an economy where the annual inflation rate was 2% two years ago and 4% last year. At the start of the current year, workers and firms negotiate nominal wages based on the expectation that this year's inflation will be the same as last year's rate. If the actual inflation rate for the current year turns out to be 6%, what is the primary consequence of this forecasting method?
Wage Negotiations in a Rising Inflation Environment
Forecasting Future Inflation
In an economy where the inflation rate has been steadily increasing each year for the past five years (e.g., from 1% to 5%), a model where individuals form their inflation expectations based solely on the previous year's inflation rate would consistently result in an underestimation of the actual inflation rate.
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Analyzing a Worsening Inflation-Unemployment Trade-off
A country's central bank makes a credible announcement that it will pursue a policy leading to higher inflation. As a result, both workers and firms revise their expectations, anticipating a higher rate of inflation in the coming years. Which of the following best describes the immediate consequence of this change in expectations on the short-run inflation-unemployment relationship?
If a country experiences several years of high inflation, causing both workers and firms to anticipate that this trend will continue, the established short-run trade-off between unemployment and inflation will remain stable.
The Role of Expectations in the Inflation-Unemployment Trade-off