Worker Dissatisfaction due to Unanticipated Inflation in a Boom
When a boom causes actual inflation to outpace the rate workers expected during wage negotiations (e.g., 5% actual vs. 3% expected), their real wage is unintentionally reduced. This creates a conflict of interest: while firm owners may benefit from the higher prices they can charge, workers are dissatisfied with the erosion of their purchasing power, which motivates them to seek higher nominal wages in the next bargaining round.
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Economics
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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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Predicting Inflationary Pressures
An economy experiences a boom that pushes unemployment below its long-run stable rate. Arrange the following events to show the resulting process that leads to accelerating inflation.
An economy is in a stable state with 6% unemployment and 3% inflation. A government stimulus program causes a boom, reducing unemployment to 4% and causing inflation to rise to 5% in the first year. Assuming workers and firms now adjust their inflation expectations to 5% for the following year, what is the most likely outcome in the second year if unemployment remains at 4%?
The Mechanism of Accelerating Inflation
The Dynamics of the Shifting Phillips Curve
A sustained period of low unemployment will cause an economy to move to progressively higher inflation points along a single, stable short-run Phillips curve.
An economy, initially in a stable state, experiences a boom that reduces unemployment. This event triggers a multi-period process of rising inflation. Match each stage of this process (Point A, Point B, Point C) with its corresponding economic description.
In the context of the wage-price spiral, after an initial period where low unemployment leads to higher inflation, the primary factor that causes the entire short-run Phillips curve to shift upwards in the following period is the upward adjustment of ____.
Evaluating a Policy Trade-off
An economy is initially stable with 3% inflation and 6% unemployment. A boom reduces unemployment to 4%, causing inflation to rise to 5%. In response, workers and firms adjust their inflation expectations to 5% for the next period, causing the entire short-run relationship between unemployment and inflation to shift upwards. Given this new, higher relationship, what would be necessary to bring the inflation rate back down to its original 3%?
Worker Dissatisfaction due to Unanticipated Inflation in a Boom
Learn After
Calculating the Nominal Wage Increase in a Wage-Price Spiral
Labor Negotiations and Unexpected Price Increases
A manufacturing firm and its workers' union agree to a 3% nominal wage increase for the upcoming year, based on a shared expectation that the general price level will also rise by 3%. However, due to an unexpected economic boom, the actual increase in the general price level turns out to be 6%. Which statement best analyzes the outcome of this situation at the end of the year?
Impact of Unexpected Price Hikes on Labor
In an economic boom where the actual rate of price increase is significantly higher than the rate workers and firms anticipated during wage negotiations, both parties (workers and firm owners) are likely to be equally dissatisfied with the resulting change in real wages.