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Macro Economics




                    Notes          Factors on Demand Side

                                   On the demand side, the major inflationary factors are:
                                       Money Supply: The first major source of inflation is an increase in money supply in the
                                       economy. Increase in money supply results primarily from an increase in demand deposits
                                       and expansion of loans and investments  by the  commercial banks. Expansion of bank
                                       credit is at once a cause and an effect of inflationary pressures since it reflects an enlarged
                                       income stream resulting from the use of bank credit and parting a growing business and
                                       personal demand for funds due to higher prices and costs.

                                       Disposable Income: This refers to the income payments to factors after personal taxes have
                                       been paid. An increase in disposable income results in an increase in the absolute amount
                                       of consumption expenditure in the economy. Such an increase is inflationary in character.
                                       Increase in Business Outlays: Increase in business outlays or capital expansion takes on a
                                       speculative character during an inflationary boom. New equipment and plants and excessive
                                       inventories are often financed by speculative borrowing, not to mention an increase in
                                       replacement demand. Most of business expenditure finds its way into the income stream
                                       dividends, wages and other income payments. These are often inflationary in character.
                                       Increased Foreign Demand: Another factor responsible for increased demand is foreign
                                       expenditure for  domestic goods and services. This factor is particularly  significant if a
                                       country maintains  an export  surplus on  its balance  of  trade.  Foreign  demand  exerts
                                       considerable inflationary pressures on domestic areas of shortages which may be a focal
                                       point of spreading inflation.
                                   It is the cumulative effect of all or most of these factors that the aggregate demand function in an
                                   economy shifts upwards, resulting in inflation in prices.

                                   10.3.2 Cost Push Inflation

                                   Modern information is far more complex than what can be explained by the simple demand pull
                                   theory. Prices and wages start rising before the economy reaches full employment. They rise
                                   even under conditions of a large idle capacity and a sizeable portion of the labour force being
                                   unemployed. This is known as “cost push” or “supply-shock” inflation.

                                   The supply or cost analysis of inflation also known as the “new-inflation theory” maintains that
                                   inflation occurs due to an increase in the cost or supply price of goods caused by increases in the
                                   prices of inputs. Rapidly rising money wages, with no corresponding rise in labour productivity
                                   in certain key sectors of the economy, result in higher prices in these sectors, particularly when
                                   the demand rises. This leads to further erosion of real wages forcing organised labour, including
                                   trade unions not involved in the initial round of wage increases, to seek a further rise in money
                                   wages. This is what is commonly referred to as wage price spiral.

                                       !

                                     Caution  The notion of cost push inflation is not new. As Bronfen-bparting Benner and
                                     Holzman have observed, “cost inflation” has been the layman’s instinctive explanation of
                                     general price increases since the dawn of the monetary system. We know of no inflationary
                                     movement that has  not been  blamed by some people  on  “profiteers”,  “speculators”,
                                     “hoarders”, or workers and peasants, “living” beyond their station.









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