ECON 1B03 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Nominal Interest Rate, Real Interest Rate, Neutrality Of Money

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ECON 1B03 Full Course Notes
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ECON 1B03 Full Course Notes
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The overall level of prices in an economy adjusts to bring money supply and money demand into balance. When the central bank increases the supply of money, it causes the price level to rise. Persistent growth in the quantity of money supplied leads to continuing inflation. The principle of monetary neutrality asserts that changes in the quantity of money influence nominal variables but not real variables. Most economists believe that monetary neutrality approximately describes the behavior of the economy in the long run. A government can pay for some of its spending simply by printing money. When countries rely heavily on this (cid:498)inflation tax,(cid:499) the result is hyperinflation. One application of the principle of monetary neutrality is the fisher effect. According to the fisher effect, when the inflation rate rises, the nominal interest rate rises by the same amount, so that the real interest rate remains the same.

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