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Inflation at Supply-Side Equilibrium with Zero Bargaining Gap

An economy can sustain ongoing inflation even when it is at its supply-side equilibrium, where the bargaining gap is zero. This occurs when all economic agents expect a certain rate of inflation. For example, if unemployment is at its equilibrium rate of 6% and everyone expects 3% inflation, both nominal wages and prices will increase by 3% annually. This synchronized adjustment maintains a constant real wage at the intersection of the WS and PS curves, resulting in an actual inflation rate that matches the expected rate.

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Updated 2026-01-15

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