ECON 1010 Chapter Notes - Chapter 28: Aggregate Demand, Potential Output, Phillips Curve

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1 Sep 2016
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Econ 1010 lecture #9 - chapter 28: the business cycle, inflation and deflation. In the long run, inflation occurs if the quantity of money grows faster than potential gdp. In the short run, many factors can start an inflation and real gdp and the price level interact. An inflation that starts because aggregate demand increases. Demand-pull inflation can begin with any factor that increases aggregate demand. It is an inflation that starts with an increase in costs. There are two main sources of increased costs: an increase in the money wage rate, an increase in the money price of raw materials, such as oil. The initial increase in costs creates a one-time rise in the price level, not inflation. To create inflation, aggregate demand must increase. That is, the bank of canada must increase the quantity of money persistently. Aggregate demand increases, but the increase is expected so its effect on the price level is expected.

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