ECON1102 Study Guide - Final Guide: Classical Dichotomy, Price Level, Longrun

71 views7 pages
13 Nov 2018
School
Department
Course
Professor

Document Summary

Price level is just a number: changes in prices are, in effect, irrelevant, simply changing the nominal value of goods and services, not its actual value. (though we will see how this is not the case in reality) Classical dichotomy: the classical dichotomy says that in the long run, the real and nominal sides of the economy are completely separate. Note so(cid:373)e people do(cid:374)(cid:859)t (cid:271)elie(cid:448)e i(cid:374) the (cid:272)lassi(cid:272)al di(cid:272)hoto(cid:373)(cid:455) at all, arguing that money is never neutral. Is (cid:373)o(cid:374)ey (cid:858)(cid:374)eutral(cid:859): classi(cid:272)al a(cid:374)d (cid:374)eo(cid:272)lassi(cid:272)al (cid:894)(cid:373)i(cid:272)roe(cid:272)o(cid:374)o(cid:373)i(cid:272)(cid:895) thought holds that (cid:373)o(cid:374)e(cid:455) is (cid:858)(cid:374)eutral(cid:859) in the real economy in the long-run, though everyone agrees that it has short-run effects. Inflation is the rate of change in the price level: e(cid:272)all that (cid:858)i(cid:374)flatio(cid:374)(cid:859) refers to rate at (cid:449)hi(cid:272)h the pri(cid:272)e le(cid:448)el (cid:272)ha(cid:374)ges: At any given point in time, we can measure the price level, i. e. what the average across all prices are e. g. we could say that on january 1 2017 the price level was.

Get access

Grade+20% off
$8 USD/m$10 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
40 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions