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Macro Economics




                    Notes          7.  In India, monetary policy measures to control inflation are taken by..............................
                                       (a)  SEBI                         (b)  Reserve Bank of India
                                       (c)  State Bank of India          (d)  Finance Ministry
                                   8.  Which of these is a measure to deal with cost-push inflation?

                                       (a)  Selective credit control     (b)  Tax control
                                       (c)  Controlling public expenditure  (d)  Wage rate control
                                   9.  Price control will lead to increase in quantity demanded and decrease in quantity supplied
                                       because the fixed price has to be .................................... the market equilibrium price.
                                       (a)  Above                        (b)  Below
                                       (c)  At par with                  (d)  More or equal to

                                   11.3 Philips Curve


                                   Single wage costs form a prime component  of the  price structure. Economists attempting  to
                                   study supply inflation have recently focussed attention on the relationship between the rate of
                                   wage rise (rate of inflation) and the rate of unemployment in the economy. This analysis runs in
                                   terms of the “Phillips curve” (named after AW Phillips, a British economist, who attempted an
                                   empirical explanation of inflation).


                                     Did u know?   Phillips found negative relation between the rate of wage increases and the
                                     rate of unemployment in England during the period 1862-1957.
                                   The Phillips Curve (PC) depicting the relation  between the percentage change in wage and
                                   percentage change in unemployment is shown in Figure 11.1 below. The curve is derived from
                                   the British economy’s data on the rate of change of money wages and the rate of unemployment.

                                                                    Figure  11.1























                                   The negative slope of PC suggests that the rate of inflation and the rate of unemployment are
                                   inversely related. The curve also  implies that  a fairly  high percentage  of unemployment  is
                                   necessary for maintaining non-inflationary price stability. So there is a trade-off between inflation
                                   rate and unemployment rate. The policy implication emerging from the PC is that wage push




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