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Managerial Economics




                    Notes          3.  Rise in the Government Expenditure: The government has to give unemployment insurance
                                       benefits to the claimants. Hence the government will lose from both sides in terms  of
                                       unemployment benefits and loss of tax revenue.

                                   1.6.3 Inflation

                                   In economics, inflation is a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services in an economy
                                   over a period of time.
                                   A rising price level — inflation — has the following disadvantages:
                                   1.  It creates uncertainty, in that people do not know what the money they earn today will
                                       buy tomorrow.
                                   2.  Uncertainty, in turn, discourages productive activity, saving and investing.
                                   3.  Inflation reduces the competitiveness of the country in international trade. If this is not
                                       offset by a devaluation of the national currency against other currencies, it makes the
                                       country's exports less  attractive, and  makes imports into the country more attractive,
                                       which in turn tends to create unbalance in trade.
                                   4.  Inflation is a hidden tax on "nominal balances." That is, people who hold bonds and bank
                                       accounts in dollars lose the value of those accounts when the price level rises, just as if
                                       their money had been taxed away.
                                   5.  The inflation tax is capricious —  some lose by it and some do not without any  good
                                       economic reason.

                                   6.  As the purchasing power of the monetary unit becomes less predictable, people resort to
                                       other means to carry out their business, means which use up resources and are inefficient.

                                   1.6.4 Economic Growth or Stagnation

                                       !
                                     Caution Stagnation is a period of many years of slow growth of gross domestic product,
                                     in which the growth is, on the average, slower than the potential growth in the economy.

                                   Causes of Stagnation

                                   1.  Population growth might high.
                                   2.  Fewer people might choose to work.
                                   3.  The growth of labor productivity might slow.

                                   Stagnation is economic growth that, while  positive, is less than the potential growth of the
                                   economy. Some economists believe that stagnation is a serious problem and a cause of other
                                   problems, but since identification of stagnation depends on one's idea of the potential, it remains
                                   controversial whether the slowing we see is stagnation or a reduction of the potential.
















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