A Persistent Increase in The Level of Consumer Prices or A Persistent Decline in The Purchasing Power of Money... "
A Persistent Increase in The Level of Consumer Prices or A Persistent Decline in The Purchasing Power of Money... "
A Persistent Increase in The Level of Consumer Prices or A Persistent Decline in The Purchasing Power of Money... "
In other words according to this definition inflation is when things getting more
expensive.
3. Features of inflation
4. Inflationary process
Aggregate supply- aggregate supply is the total supply of goods and services
produced by a national economy during a specific time period. It is the total
amount of goods and services in the economy.
Price inflation has immense effect on the Time Value of Money (TVM). This acts as a principal
component of the rates of interest, which forms the basis of all TVM calculations. The real or
estimated changes occurring in the rates of inflation lead to changes in the rates of interest as well.
The most immediate effect of inflation is the decrease in the purchasing power of moneyand its
depreciation. Inflation influences the investments of a country. The Inflation-protected Securities (IPSs)
may act as a guard against the loss in the purchasing power of the fixed-income investments (like fixed
allowances and bonds), which may occur during inflation.
Inflation changes the allocation of income. This exerts maximum effect on the lenders than the
borrowers at the time of persisting inflation, because the loans sanctioned previously are paid back later
in the form of inflated rupees.
Inflation leads to a handful of the consumers in making extensive speculation, to derive advantage
of the high price levels. Since some of the purchases are high-risk investments, they result in diversion of
the expenditures from regular channels, giving birth to a few structural unemployments.
inflation in india
Inflation in India is at an acceptable level and remains much lower than in many other developing countries.
But off late prices of essential commodities such as food grain, edible oil, vegetables etc have risen sharply
and in the process driving up the inflation rate.
Inflation is defined as a sustained increase in the general level of prices for goods and services. It is
measured as an annual percentage increase. As inflation rises, the value of currency goes down. Thus the
purchasing power of the currency, i.e. the goods and services that can be bought in a unit of currency, too
goes down.
Measuring inflation is a difficult task. To do so a number of goods that are representative of the economy are
put together into what is referred as a "market basket." The cost of this basket is then compared over time.
This results in a price index, which is the cost of the market basket today as a percentage of the cost of that
identical basket in the starting year. In India two types of index: Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Wholesale
Price Index (WPI) are used to monitor inflation. Off the two, Wholesale Price Index (WPI) is the most widely
used price index in India. It is used to measure the change in the average price level of goods traded in
wholesale market and is available on a weekly basis with the shortest possible time lag only two weeks.
The current rise in inflation has its roots in supply-side factors. There was shortfall in domestic production
vis-a-vis domestic demand and hardening of international prices, prices of primary commodities, mainly food
items. Wheat, pulses, edible oils, fruits and vegetables, and condiments and spices have been the major
contributors to the higher inflation rate of primary articles. The inflation was also accompanied by buoyant
growth of money and credit. While the GDP growth zoomed to 9.0 per cent per annum, the broad money
(M3) grew by more than 20 per cent. Demand for nearly everything from housing to fast moving consumer
goods is outpacing supply in part because white-collar salaries are rising faster in India than anywhere else
in Asia. One of the daunting tasks before the government is to reconcile the twin needs of facilitating credit
for growth on the one hand and containing liquidity to tame inflation on the other.