Macro · 14 min read

Inflation: from price noise to macro strategy

Inflation is a sustained movement in the general price level. Olympiad answers win when you name the mechanism, the index, and the policy trade-off.

What inflation measures

Inflation rate π ≈ (Pt − Pt−1) / Pt−1. Deflation is negative inflation; disinflation means inflation is positive but falling.

Separate a one-time shock from ongoing inflation driven by wage indexation and expectations.

CPI, GDP deflator, core

CPI — consumer basket. GDP deflator — domestic output prices. Core — excludes volatile food and energy.

Implicit deflator = Nominal GDP / Real GDP × 100. Do not mix indices without justification.

Demand-pull, cost-push, built-in

Demand-pull: AD shifts right. Cost-push: SRAS shifts left (stagflation risk). Built-in: past inflation feeds wage demands and prices.

Expected vs unexpected

Unexpected inflation redistributes wealth and distorts relative prices. Fisher: nominal rate ≈ real rate + expected π.

Central bank response

Tighter money reduces demand but raises unemployment risk. Mention recognition, implementation, and effect lags.

Checklist

  • Relative price ≠ inflation without a general index.
  • Label AD-AS shifts and new equilibrium.
  • Connect to Phillips curve when labor markets appear.

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