Cambridge International as and a level Economics Ebook



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costs:
These aff ect firms and are the costs 
involved in changing prices. For example, catalogues, 
price tags, bar codes and advertisements have to be 
changed. This involves staff time and is unpopular with 
customers.

Shoe leather costs
: These are the costs involved in moving 
money from one financial institution to another in search of 
the highest rate of interest.

 Fiscal 
drag
: This is now sometimes referred to as 
‘bracket creep’. It occurs when the income levels 
corresponding to diff erent tax rates are not adjusted 
in line with inflation. As a result, people and firms are 
dragged into higher tax brackets. It can be argued, 
however, that this is a cost of an ineff icient tax system 
rather than a cost of inflation.

 
Discouragement of investment: Unanticipated inflation 
can create uncertainty and so make it more diff icult 
for firms to plan ahead. This may dissuade firms 
from investing, which will have an adverse eff ect on 
economic growth.

 Inflationary 
noise
: This is also called ‘money illusion’. 
This arises when inflation causes consumers and firms 
to confuse price signals. Inflation can make it diff icult 
to assess what is happening to relative prices. A rise in 
the price of a product may not mean that it has become 
more expensive relative to other products. Indeed, the 
product may have risen in price by less than inflation 
and so may have become relatively cheaper. Inflationary 
noise can result in consumers and firms making the 
wrong decisions. For example, firms seeing the price 
of their products rising may increase output when 
the higher price is the result of inflation rather than 
increased demand for their products. This may result in a 
misallocation of resources.

 
Inflation causing inflation: Inflation may generate 
further inflation as consumers, workers and firms will 
come to expect prices to rise. As a result, they may 
act in a way that will cause inflation. For example, 
workers may press for higher wages, firms may raise 
prices to cover expected higher costs and consumers 
may seek to purchase products now before their prices 
rise further.
Figure 4.9 
Demand-pull inflation
Price level
P
0
Real GDP
AD
AD
AD
1
AS
AD
1
Y
1
Y
AS
P
1

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