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8 INFLATION FOCUS OF THE CHAPTER • In this chapter we examine the costs of inflation. • The cost of anticipated inflation is very small, at least at the moderate levels experienced in industrial countries. • The cost of unanticipated inflation can be quite large and is mainly distributional. SECTION SUMMARIES 1. The Costs of Inflation Inflation is costly, or at least it can be. There is little cost associated with moderate levels of perfectly anticipated inflationrates of inflation that are neither higher nor lower than anyone expects. The cost of holding currency does rise slightly, with higher inflation the value of any currency will erode more quickly. There is also a small cost associated with changing nominal pricesreprinting prices on signs and menus, for example. This is called a menu cost, but with low levels of inflation this cost is quite small. Because contracts are negotiated with a level of anticipated inflation ( ) in mind, there are much more substantial costs associated with imperfectly anticipated inflation. For example, a banker making a loan with a 5 percent nominal interest rate expects to receive a real return of 5 e percent – e (recall that the real interest rate is just the nominal interest ratethe rate of inflation). The student who receives this loan expects to pay a real interest rate of 5 percent – e . If the rate of inflation is higher than either of them expects, the bank receives a lower real interest rate than it had anticipated. The student pays a lower real interest rate than he or she had expected to. In short, the student wins, the bank loses. The opposite will be true if the rate of inflation is lower than expected; in this case, the real interest rate will be higher than anyone anticipates. Creditors will benefit; debtors will be hurt. 84 INFLATION 85 The effects of unanticipated inflation are mostly distributional and operate on any asset fixed in nominal terms. Obviously, it is an extremely important effect, since it can wipe out the purchasing power of a lifetime’s saving that is supposed to finance retirement consumption. 2. Inflation and Indexation: Inflation-Proofing the Economy The major ways that unanticipated inflation redistributes income are through loans and wage contracts. An alternative to negotiating contracts in nominal terms and worrying about the level of future inflation is to index themtie their payoffs to the inflation rate. Wage contracts, for example, might include automatic cost of living adjustments, or COLA provisions, which tie nominal wages to the CPI. In countries where inflation rates are both high and uncertain, governments typically issue indexed debt. A bond is indexed (to the price level) when either the interest or the principal or both are adjusted for inflation. Uncertainty about the outlook for inflation was one of the reasons a new financial instrument made its appearance: the adjustable rate mortgage (ARM). This is a long-term loan with an interest rate that is periodically (every year, for example) adjusted in line with prevailing short-term interest rates. To the extent that nominal interest rates roughly reflect inflation trends, adjustable rate mortgages reduce the effects of inflation on the long-term real costs of financing home purchases. Of course, the CPI is not a perfect measure of inflation, and by tying wages and interest rates to this measure we may just be trading one source of uncertainty for another. Indexation also makes it more difficult for the economy to adjust to supply shocks, as it prevents real wages from rising or falling without explicit negotiation. Indexation is used widely only in countries with extremely high rates of inflation. 3. Is a Little Inflation Good for the Economy? Some economists argue that low rates of inflation can be beneficial, as they allow real wages to adjust when necessary, without explicit negotiation. This is controversial, however, and a significant departure from the traditional belief that zero inflation is always best. KEY TERMS adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) imperfectly anticipated inflation indexation indexed debt menu costs perfectly anticipated inflation GRAPH IT 8 We know that the real interest rate is equal to the nominal interest rate minus inflation. In this Graph It, you will calculate the real interest rate for the years 1992-2012 and compare it to the nominal interest rate. Table 81 Year Nominal Interest Rate Inflation Real Interest Rate 1992 3.4 3.0 0.4 1993 3.0 3.0 1994 4.3 2.6 1995 5.5 2.8 1996 5.0 3.0 1997 5.1 2.3 1998 4.8 1.6 1999 4.6 2.2 2000 5.8 3.4 2001 3.4 2.8 2002 1.6 1.6 2003 1.0 2.3 2004 1.4 2.7 2005 3.2 3.4 2006 4.7 3.2 2007 4.4 2.8 2008 1.4 3.8 2009 0.2 -0.3 2010 0.1 1.7 2011 0.1 3.1 2012 0.1 2.1 86 INFLATION CROSSWORD ACROSS 3 one type of cost arising from perfectly anticipated inflation 87 88 CHAPTER 8 5 these guys benefit when inflation is higher than anticipated 7 the type of wealth effect caused by unanticipated inflation 8 it is costly to hold money in this form when inflation is high 10 acronym for a long-term loan that is indexed to short-term interest rates DOWN 1 ties nominal wages to price level and rate of inflation 2 indexation can make it hard for the economy to adjust to these 4 an inflation cost associated with visiting the bank often 6 lose when inflation is higher than anticipated 9 acronym associated with wage indexation FILL-IN QUESTIONS 1. An unforeseen increase in the rate of inflation benefits _________________, at the expense of _________________. 2. An expected increase in the rate of inflation hurts people who hold _________________. 3. Inflation is the percent rate of change in _________________. 4. When inflation is high and unpredictable governments may issue _________________. 5. The cost of anticipated inflation is very inflation can be quite . , while the cost of unanticipated 6. - there are big winners and big losers. The cost of unanticipated inflation is mainly TRUE-FALSE QUESTIONS T F 1. The effects of unanticipated inflation are mostly distributional. T F 2. The costs of moderate (single digit) anticipated inflation are fairly trivial. T F 3. The costs of high (triple and quadruple digit) anticipated inflation are quite serious. T F 4. High inflation makes holding currency less costly. INFLATION T F 5. Indexed debt must have an adjustable interest rate. T F 6. Uncertainty about inflation in the U.S. has led to a recent rise in fixed rate mortgages. T F 7. Wage indexation can make it harder for the economy to adjust to shocks requiring relative price changes. T F 8. Firms can create real wage cuts by only partially adjusting wages for inflation. MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS 1. Anticipated inflation transfers wealth from a. creditors to debtors b. debtors to creditors c. poor to rich d. none of the above 2. Unanticipated inflation transfers wealth from a. creditors to debtors b. debtors to creditors c. poor to rich d. none of the above 3. Wages and prices should most clearly be indexed in countries with a. high inflation b. low inflation c. both d. neither 4. The cost of this type of inflation are mainly distributional a. high inflation b. low inflation c. anticipated inflation d. unanticipated inflation 5. The cost of holding this rise along with the inflation rate a. a salaried job b. currency c. bonds d. stocks 6. Cost-of-living adjustment provisions are an example of a. housing indexation b. long-term loans c. wage indexation d. costs of inflation 89 CONCEPTUAL PROBLEMS 1. Should zero inflation be a goal? Justify your answer. 90