Definition and examples of inflation


Pros and Cons of Inflation



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DEFINITION AND EXAMPLES OF INFLATION (2)

Pros and Cons of Inflation
Inflation can be construed as either a good or a bad thing, depending upon which side one takes, and how rapidly the change occurs.
For example, individuals with tangible assets that are priced in currency, like property or stocked commodities, may like to see some inflation as that raises the price of their assets, which they can sell at a higher rate. However, the buyers of such assets may not be happy with inflation, as they will be required to shell out more money. Inflation-indexed bonds are another popular option for investors to profit from inflation.
On the other hand, people holding assets denominated in currency, such as cash or bonds, may also not like inflation, as it erodes the real value of their holdings. Investors looking to protect their portfolios from inflation should consider inflation-hedged asset classes, such as gold, commodities, and real estate investment trusts (REITs).
Inflation promotes speculation, both by businesses in risky projects and by individuals in stocks of companies, as they expect better returns than inflation. An optimum level of inflation is often promoted to encourage spending to a certain extent instead of saving. If the purchasing power of money falls over time, then there may be a greater incentive to spend now instead of saving and spending later. It may increase spending, which may boost economic activities in a country. A balanced approach is thought to keep the inflation value in an optimum and desirable range.
High and variable rates of inflation can impose major costs on an economy. Businesses, workers, and consumers must all account for the effects of generally rising prices in their buying, selling, and planning decisions. This introduces an additional source of uncertainty into the economy, because they may guess wrong about the rate of future inflation. Time and resources expended on researching, estimating, and adjusting economic behavior are expected to rise to the general level of prices, rather than real economic fundamentals, which inevitably represents a cost to the economy as a whole.
Even a low, stable, and easily predictable rate of inflation, which some consider otherwise optimal, may lead to serious problems in the economy, because of how, where, and when the new money enters the economy. Whenever new money and credit enters the economy it is always into the hands of specific individuals or business firms, and the process of price level adjustment to the new money supply proceeds as they then spend the new money and it circulates from hand to hand and account to account through the economy.
Along the way, it drives up some prices first and later drives up other prices. This sequential change in purchasing power and prices (known as the Cantillon effect) means that the process of inflation not only increases the general price level over time, but it also distorts relative prices, wages, and rates of return along the way.9 Economists, in general, understand that distortions of relative prices away from their economic equilibrium are not good for the economy, and Austrian economists even believe this process to be a major driver of cycles of recession in the economy.10

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