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Karthikeyan

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Inflation and Deflation

Meaning and Measurement

Inflation

  • Inflation means a rise in the general price level of goods and services in an economy.

  • It means money loses value — you can buy less with the same amount.

  • Example: If prices rise by 5%, what cost ₹100 before will cost ₹105 now.

Deflation

  • Deflation means a fall in the general price level of goods and services.

  • It means money gains value — you can buy more with the same amount.

Disinflation

  • Prices are still rising, but at a slower rate.Example: Inflation falls from 8% to 4%.

How Inflation Is Measured (IGCSE method)

  • The government makes a “basket of goods” that people usually buy (like food, clothes, fuel).

  • They record the prices of these items every month.

  • They compare the prices with the prices in a base year (set as 100).

  • This gives the Consumer Price Index (CPI).


If CPI goes up, there is inflation.

 If CPI goes down, there is deflation.


Causes

Causes of Inflation

  1. Demand-Pull Inflation

    • When demand is higher than supply.

    • Example: People have more money → buy more → shops increase prices.

    • Happens when:

      • Wages rise

      • Taxes fall

      • Government spends more

      • Low interest rates → more borrowing

  2. Cost-Push Inflation

    • When cost of making goods increases.

    • Firms raise prices to cover costs.

    • Happens when:

      • Wages increase

      • Price of raw materials goes up

      • Import prices rise

      • Higher taxes on goods

Causes of Deflation

  1. Fall in Demand

    • People spend less → firms reduce prices.

    • Happens during recession, high unemployment, or high interest rates.

  2. Increase in Supply

    • Firms make more goods cheaply (new tech, more efficiency).

    • Prices fall because it’s cheaper to produce.


 How to Control Them

How to Reduce Inflation

  1. Monetary Policy

    • Increase interest rates → people borrow less, spend less.

    • Reduce money supply.

  2. Fiscal Policy

    • Reduce government spending.

    • Increase taxes to lower demand.

  3. Supply-Side Policies

    • Make workers more productive.

    • Reduce cost of production (training, technology).

How to Control Deflation

  1. Lower interest rates → cheaper loans → more spending.

  2. Increase government spending → create jobs.

  3. Cut taxes → people have more money to spend.

  4. Encourage investment → boost demand.

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