ECON 1000 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Hyperinflation, Money Supply, Demand For Money

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Inflation is an increase in the overall level of prices: hyperinflation is an extraordinary high rate of inflation. Over the past 60 years, the prices have risen on average about 4 percent a year. Deflation occurred in canada in the twentieth century. In the 1970s prices rose by 7 percent per year. During the 1990s, prices rose at an average rate of 2 percent per year: the quantity theory of money is used to explain the long-run determinants of the price level and the inflation rate. Inflation is an economy-wide phenomenon that concerns the value of the economy"s medium of exchange: when the overall price level rises, the value of money falls. The value of money (e. g. cpi of gdp: p is the price of the basket of goods, measured in money, example. If p = , value of = 1/2 of a candy bar. If p = , value of = 1/3 of a candy bar.

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