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Inflation has a lot of impact on monetary unit assumption. Inflation greatly reduces the value of a monetary unit and acts as a hidden tax on consumers.
Monetary policy can have an impact of inflation. The ideal state of the economy is a balance between inflation and unemployment at 4.3% which is only seen in a wartime economy.
Look here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflation#Causes
Milton Friedman
Aggregate demand is actually influenced mostly by the nation's monetary policy and fiscal policy, not so much by inflation. Aggregate demand is actually influenced mostly by the nation's monetary policy and fiscal policy, not so much by inflation.
Inflation has a lot of impact on monetary unit assumption. Inflation greatly reduces the value of a monetary unit and acts as a hidden tax on consumers.
Monetary policy can have an impact of inflation. The ideal state of the economy is a balance between inflation and unemployment at 4.3% which is only seen in a wartime economy.
Look here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflation#Causes
Edward Nelson has written: 'Milton Friedman and U.S. monetary history' -- subject(s): Monetary policy 'Monetary policy neglect and the great inflation in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand' -- subject(s): Inflation (Finance), Monetary policy
Athanasios Orphanides has written: 'Monetary policy in deflation' 'The decline of activist stabilization policy' 'The reliability of inflation forecasts based on output gap estimates in real time' 'Inflation scares and forecast-based monetary policy' -- subject(s): Forecasting, Inflation (Finance), Monetary policy, Rational expectations (Economic theory) 'Monetary policy with imperfect knowledge'
Milton Friedman
Aggregate demand is actually influenced mostly by the nation's monetary policy and fiscal policy, not so much by inflation. Aggregate demand is actually influenced mostly by the nation's monetary policy and fiscal policy, not so much by inflation.
The gain in purchasing power that is derived from holding monetary assets and/or monetary liabilities during a period of changing prices. An increase in prices tends to devalue monetary assets and monetary liabilities. Thus, if a firm's monetary liabilities exceeded its monetary assets, inflation would tend to produce monetary gains.
Print more money
contract the money sypply
Hans Wielens has written: 'Inflation kein Alptraum' -- subject(s): Inflation (Finance), Investments, Monetary policy
The monetary system in the Philippines is quite diverse. It has changed over time and has even gone through periods of inflation.