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Introduction to U.S. Economy: Inflation


What Is Inflation?
Inflation is defined as a general increase in the price of
goods and services across the economy, or, in other words,
a general decrease in the value of money. Conversely,
deflation is a general decrease in the price of goods and
services across the economy, or a general increase in the
value of money.

As inflation occurs, individuals can purchase fewer goods
and services with the same amount of money. For this
reason, an individual would need about $304 in 2020 to
purchase the same amount of goods and services as $100
would have purchased in 1980. Measures of inflation are
used to adjust money figures to keep purchasing power
constant over time, allowing for more accurate comparisons
across disparate time periods. Monetary figures that have
been adjusted for inflation are referred to as real, and non-
inflation-adjusted figures are referred to as nominal.

Measuring Inflation
The rate of inflation can be measured by observing changes
in the average price of a consistent set of goods and
services, often referred to as a market basket. Inflation is
generally measured using a price index, such as the
Consumer  Price Index (CPI). A price index is constructed
by dividing the price of a market basket in a given year by
the price of the same basket of goods in a base year. The
rate of inflation is then measured by calculating the
percentage change in the price index across different
periods. For example, the CPI was about 257 in November
2019 and about 260 in November 2020, which amounts to
an inflation rate of about 1.2% over this 12-month period.

Alternative  Measures   of Inflation
Alternative price indices will use different goods within
their market baskets and are generally used for different
purposes. For example, the CPI includes consumer goods
and services typically purchased by households, which is
often used to adjust household incomes for inflation over
time. By contrast, the gross domestic product (GDP)
deflator, which is generally used to adjust GDP for inflation
over time, measures inflation for all of the final goods and
services produced in the United States. There are a number
of additional measures of inflation, including the Producer
Price Index, Employment Cost Index, Personal
Consumption  Expenditures Index, and Import/Export Price
Index. Different inflation measures are calculated
differently. For example, the CPI uses a (mostly) fixed
basket of goods and services, whereas the GDP deflator
allows the composition of its market basket to change with
spending patterns from period to period.

Additionally, within a specific price index, researchers
often make separate calculations for so-called headline
inflation and core inflation, as seen in Figure 1. Headline


Updated December  28, 2020


inflation includes the full set of goods and services within
the basket of goods, whereas core inflation excludes energy
and food prices from the basket of goods. Core inflation is
often used by researchers in place of headline inflation due
to the volatile nature of the price of food and energy.
However,  headline inflation can provide a more accurate
sense of the price changes actually faced by individuals.


Figure
January


I Annual Inflation Rate
I 960-October 2020


14%,













Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Notes: Annual percentage change as measured by Personal
Consumption Expenditures Index.

Complications   in Measuring  Inflation
The fundamental concept behind inflation is to measure
changes in the price of the same goods and services over
time. However, in reality, thsis nearly impossible for two
reasons. First, the quality of goods and services change over
time. As such, some portion of increasing prices over time
is due to improvements in quality rather than inflation.
Second, new products are introduced into the marketplace
over time that are fundamentally different than any
previously available products and are only slowly
incorporated into price indices with fixed baskets.
Statistical agencies try to adjust data to account for these
factors, because, if these complications are not correctly
accounted for, measured inflation would be inaccurate and
most likely overstated.

Causes of Inflation
Inflation is largely the result of two different phenomena,
which are often referred to as demand-pull and cost-push
inflation. Demand-pull inflation occurs when demand for
goods and services within the economy exceeds the
economy's  capacity to produce goods and services. As
demand  exceeds supply within the economy-too much
money  chasing too few goods-there is upward pressure
placed on prices, resulting in rising inflation.

Cost-push inflation occurs when the price of input goods
and services increases. The classic example of cost-push


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