Real Wage Stability on the PS Curve During an Inflationary Spiral
During an inflationary spiral driven by low unemployment, both nominal wages and the price level are continuously rising. However, because firms adjust prices to maintain their profit margins, the increases in wages are matched by increases in prices. As a result, the real wage (the ratio of the nominal wage to the price level) does not change. It remains constant at the level determined by the price-setting (PS) curve.
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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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Real Wage Stability on the PS Curve During an Inflationary Spiral
Analyzing an Inflationary Spiral
An economy experiences a sustained period where the unemployment rate is held consistently below the level that would normally keep inflation constant. If workers and firms form their expectations about future inflation based on the inflation rate of the previous period, what is the most likely outcome for the inflation rate over several consecutive periods?
An economy starts at its inflation-stabilizing unemployment rate. A government stimulus then causes unemployment to fall and remain below this rate for several periods. Arrange the following events to show the causal chain that leads to continuously rising inflation, assuming expectations are based on the previous period's inflation.
In an economy where unemployment is persistently below the inflation-stabilizing rate, the resulting positive bargaining gap is, by itself, sufficient to cause inflation to increase year after year.
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Real Wage in an Inflationary Environment
In an economy experiencing an inflationary spiral where unemployment is consistently low, both nominal wages and the general price level are rising. According to the price-setting (PS) model, why does the real wage remain stable under these conditions?
In an economy experiencing an inflationary spiral due to consistently low unemployment, the purchasing power of workers' wages steadily increases because nominal wages are rising faster than the price level.
Real Wage Calculation in an Inflationary Spiral