Figure 4.29: UK's Terms-of-Trade Shock and its Reversal (2022-2023)
Figure 4.29 provides data on the economic impact of the terms-of-trade shock from increased energy prices in the UK. Initially, the evidence indicates that workers absorbed the majority of this negative impact, bearing approximately three-quarters of the total loss. The figure also shows that this terms-of-trade loss began to reverse from late 2022, a development that preceded a rise in real wages.
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Ch.4 Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Key Issues for Future Inflation Evolution (WS-PS Model Perspective)
UK's Disinflationary Process Following the 2022 Terms-of-Trade Shock Reversal
Figure 4.29: UK's Terms-of-Trade Shock and its Reversal (2022-2023)
Figure 4.29: Overview of UK Economic Indicators
Ineffectiveness of UK's Energy Price Cap on Real Wages
Analyzing an Inflationary Shock
An economy heavily reliant on imported energy experiences a sudden, sharp increase in global energy prices. Simultaneously, the government raises taxes that affect businesses. Arrange the following economic events in the most likely causal sequence that leads to a sustained period of high inflation.
Consider an economy facing two simultaneous events: a sharp rise in the cost of imported raw materials and an increase in taxes levied on corporate revenues. According to the wage-setting/price-setting framework, which of the following best describes the initial mechanism that translates these supply-side shocks into sustained domestic price inflation?
Evaluating a Supply-Side Explanation for Inflation
In an economy experiencing high inflation following a major increase in imported energy costs and a rise in business taxes, the wage-setting/price-setting framework suggests that the primary cause of the inflationary spiral is the upward shift of the wage-setting curve, driven by workers' demands for higher real wages before any changes in the firms' pricing policies.