Expected Inflation (π^E)
Expected inflation, symbolized as , represents the rate of future price increases that households and firms anticipate. This concept is pivotal for understanding modern macroeconomic models, particularly for analyzing the Phillips curve, as it directly influences current wage and price-setting behavior.
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.4 Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Ch.5 Macroeconomic policy: Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Expected Inflation (π^E)
Distinction Between Nominal and Real Interest Rates
Evaluating a Salary Increase
A software company gives all its employees a 4% salary increase for the year. Over the same period, the general level of prices for goods and services in the economy rises by 6%. Based on this information, what has happened to the employees' ability to purchase goods and services?
Firm's Revenue Analysis
A company increases the price of its product by 10% during a year when the average rate of price increases for all goods and services in the economy is also 10%. This pricing strategy will necessarily lead to an increase in the company's real revenue.
Match each economic scenario with the most accurate description of the change in value.
Evaluating Economic Well-being
If an individual's nominal income increases by 3% in a year, but the overall price level rises by 5%, their real income, or purchasing power, has actually ____.
A small business owner is reviewing their company's performance over the last year. To accurately assess whether the business is truly better off, they need to analyze their revenue. Arrange the following steps in the logical order the owner should follow to make a sound judgment based on economic principles.
A labor union is negotiating a three-year contract that offers its members a fixed 3% nominal wage increase each year. Which of the following statements best describes the primary economic risk for the union members associated with this wage agreement?
Strategic Market Expansion Decision
Resistance to Nominal Wage Cuts
Expected Inflation
Expected Inflation (π^E)
A company and its workers' union are negotiating a new contract. Both sides anticipate that the overall price level in the economy will increase by 5% over the next year. The company offers a 3% nominal wage increase. From a macroeconomic perspective, why is the union likely to reject this offer?
Real vs. Nominal Pricing Decision
The Illusion of a Pay Raise
Evaluating a Nominal Wage Policy
A firm provides a 3% nominal wage increase to its employees in a year where the overall price level increases by 5%. This action results in an increase in the firm's real labor costs.
Learn After
Formation of Inflation Expectations
Inflation at Supply-Side Equilibrium with Zero Bargaining Gap
Causal Chain of Inflation with Positive Expected Inflation
Friedman's Argument: How Adaptive Expectations Fuel Accelerating Inflation
Expectations-Driven Inflation and the Shifting Phillips Curve
Mechanism of Accelerating Inflation from Low Unemployment and Positive Expectations
A country's economy is currently at its long-run equilibrium, where the labor market is balanced. Both firms and workers' unions are negotiating new annual contracts and widely anticipate that the general level of prices will increase by 3% over the next year. To maintain the existing purchasing power of wages and the firm's real profit margins, what is the most likely outcome for nominal wages and prices in these new contracts?
Wage Negotiation Strategy
A company's management team is deciding on its pricing strategy for the next year. The consensus forecast among economists is for 4% inflation. The CEO argues, 'Our production costs are locked in with long-term supplier contracts, so they won't rise. Therefore, to stay competitive, we should hold our prices constant. This will keep our nominal profit per unit the same.' Which statement best evaluates the CEO's argument from an economic perspective?
Rationale for Wage Adjustments
For several years, an economy has experienced price stability, leading both workers and firms to anticipate zero inflation in their annual contract negotiations. Now, the central bank makes a credible announcement that it will pursue policies to achieve a 2% annual inflation rate. How will this new, widely-held expectation of 2% inflation most likely influence the upcoming wage and price-setting decisions?
Pricing Strategy and Real Profitability
Decomposing a Nominal Wage Increase
A retail company anticipates that the general rate of price increases in the economy will be 4% over the next year. In response, the company decides to increase the prices of its own products by 4%. This pricing strategy is designed to increase the company's real profit margin.
Conflicting Inflation Expectations in Business Planning
In Year 1, a union negotiates a 5% nominal wage increase for its members, who subsequently find their purchasing power has noticeably improved. In Year 2, the same union negotiates another 5% nominal wage increase, but this time, its members report that their purchasing power has remained roughly the same. Assuming the basket of goods and services consumed by the workers is consistent, what is the most plausible explanation for this difference?