The Consequences of Unanchored Inflation Expectations
Analyze the potential economic consequences for a country where the central bank consistently fails to meet its stated inflation target. In your analysis, explain the chain of events, starting from the central bank's actions and linking them to the formation of public inflation expectations and the subsequent effects on wage negotiations and price-setting by firms.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.5 Macroeconomic policy: Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Ch.7 Macroeconomic policy in the global economy - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
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How Anchored Expectations Reduce the Cost of Disinflation
Imagine two countries, Country A and Country B, both of which have a central bank with an official inflation target of 2%. The central bank of Country A has a long, established history of consistently taking action to keep inflation near 2%. The central bank of Country B, however, has a history of frequently allowing inflation to drift far from its 2% target without a decisive response. If both countries experience an identical, unexpected economic shock that temporarily pushes inflation up to 5%, in which country are long-term wage and price-setting behaviors more likely to remain stable, and why?
Central Bank Credibility and Inflation Expectations
The Mechanism of Anchoring Inflation Expectations
The Consequences of Unanchored Inflation Expectations
A central bank that consistently allows inflation to remain above its stated target without taking decisive action will find that the public's long-term inflation expectations become more firmly anchored to the official target.
Match each description of a central bank's policy history with the most likely state of the public's inflation expectations in that country.
A country's central bank, previously known for inconsistent policies, wants to firmly establish its credibility and anchor the public's long-term inflation expectations at a new, lower target. Arrange the following events in the most logical sequence that would lead to this outcome.
A country's central bank has maintained a credible 2% inflation target for many years, leading to stable public expectations. A new government administration begins to publicly pressure the central bank to tolerate a higher inflation rate (e.g., 4-5%) for the next several years to stimulate short-term economic growth. If the central bank yields to this pressure, what is the most significant long-term risk associated with this policy shift?
Central Bank Policy Choice After a Supply Shock
In an economy where the central bank has a long and credible history of maintaining its 2% inflation target, a sudden, temporary increase in energy costs pushes the current inflation rate to 5%. In this scenario, businesses and workers are less likely to build this 5% rate into long-term wage negotiations and price-setting decisions because they expect the central bank's actions will cause inflation to ultimately ____.