ECON 1100 Chapter Notes - Chapter 13: World Oil Market Chronology From 2003, Finn E. Kydland, Adaptive Expectations

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Chapter 13: inflation, unemployment, and bank of canada policy. Leverage: a measure of how much debt an investor assumes in making an investment. An important consideration for the bank of canada as it carries out monetary policy is that in the short-run, there can be a trade-off between unemployment and inflation: lower unemployment rates = higher inflation rates. In the long-run, however, this trade-off disappears, and the unemployment rate is independent of the inflation rate. 13. 1 the discovery of the short-run trade-off between unemployment and inflation. Ordinarily, unemployment and inflation are the two great macroeconomic problems the bank of. When aggregate demand increases, unemployment usually falls and inflation rises. When aggregate demand decreases, unemployment usually rises and inflation falls: there is a short-run trade-off between unemployment and inflation. Low inflation usually accompanies high unemployment: high inflation usually accompanies low unemployment, appears in the short-run, but disappears in the long-run.

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