Ishaeva V. O.
PhD Zhukova O. S.
PhD Petrachkova O. L
Donetsk State University of
Management
INFLATIONARY
PROCESS
Inflation is a steady rise in the average
price and wage level. The rise in wages being high enough to raise costs of
production, prices grow further resulting in a higher rate of inflation and,
finally, in an inflationary spiral. Periods when inflation rates are very
large are referred to as1 hyperinflation.
The
causes of inflation are rather complicated, and there is a number of theories
explaining them. Monetarists, such as Milton Friedman, say that inflation is
caused by too rapid increase in money supply and the corresponding excess
demand for goods.
Therefore,
monetarists consider due government control of money supply to be able to restrict
inflation rates. They also believe the high rate of unemployment to be likely
to restrain claims for higher wages. People having jobs accept the wages they
are being paid, the inflationary spiral being kept under control. This
situation also accounts for rather slow increase in aggregate demand.
On
the other hand, Keynesians, that is, economists following the theory of John M.
Keynes, suppose inflation to be due to processes occurring in money
circulation. They say that low inflation and unemployment rates can be ensured
by adopting a tight incomes policy.
Incomes
policies, though, monetarists argue, may temporarily speed up the transition to
a lower inflation rate but they are unlikely to succeed in the long run2.
The
costs of inflation depend on whether it was anticipated and on the extent to
which the economy's institutions allow complete inflation adjustment.
The
longer inflation continues, the more the economy learns to live with it.
Indexation is a means to reduce the costs of some inflation effects. In dexed
wages or loans mean that the amount to be paid or repaid will rise with price
level. Indexation has already been introduced in countries that had to live
with inflation on rates of 30 or 40 percent for years. And the more countries
adjust their economies to cope with inflation, the closer they come to
hyperinflation.
Indexation
means that high rates of inflation are much more likely to continue and even to
increase.
Literature:
1. Chernavskii D S et al. "The dynamics of the economic society structure" Mathematical Models of Non-Linear Excitations, Transfer, Dynamics, and Control in Condensed Systems and Other Media (Eds L A Uvarova, A E Arinstein, A V Latyshev) (New York: Kluwer Acad./Plenum Publ., 1999) p. 103
2. Clague Christpher : The Emergence of Market Economics in Eastern Europe, 1992
3. Schumpeter J A The Theory of Economic Development (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, 1934);
4. World Bank : World Development Report, 1996
5. Blanchard O., Layard R. : Economic Change in Poland, 1990
6. Kornai I. : The Road to a free Economy
7. Rausser G.C. : A Noncooperative Model of Multilateral Bargaining
8. Schumpeter I.A. : The Theory of Economic Development
9. World Bank : World Development Report, 1990
10. Giersch H. : Tawards a Market Economy in Central and Eastern Europe, Berlin 1991
11. Samuelson P A Foundations of Economic Analysis (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, 1947)
12. Chernavskii D S, Starkov N I, Scherbakov A V J. Moscow Phys. Soc. 9 89 (1999)
13. Kahtzenbach Erhard : Problems of Reconstructuring in Eastern Europe
14. Gregory P.R., Streart R.C. : Comparative Economic Systems
15. Hartmats R: Making markets: Economic transformation in Eastern Europe and the Post Soviet States.