What are the fiscal policy options to reduce an inflationary gap?
Policies that can reduce an inflationary gap include reductions in government spending, tax increases, bond and securities issues, interest rate increases, and transfer payment reductions.
What happens to inflationary gap without government intervention?
When an inflationary gap occurs, the economy is out of equilibrium level, and the price level of goods and services will rise (either naturally or through government intervention) to make up for the increased demand and insufficient supply—and that rise in prices is called demand-pull inflation.
How does the economy eventually adjust to an inflationary gap?
When the short-run aggregate supply curve reaches SRAS 2, the economy will have returned to its potential output, and employment will have returned to its natural level. These adjustments will close the inflationary gap.
What happens to an inflationary gap in the long run?
For an inflationary gap, in the long run, SRAS shifts to correct the gap. The way this happens is: higher prices lead to higher nominal wages, which leads to a leftward shift in SRAS, closing the gap.
How does the economy adjust to full employment in the long run?
If there is an increase in aggregate demand, the price level will go up. Once wages have adjusted to that inflation in the long run, SRAS decreases and returns the economy to full employment output.
Is the US in a recessionary or inflationary gap?
What is interesting to note is that the US economy indicates that it is in an inflationary gap in terms of the unemployment rate. However, inflation has been subdued in the economy and remains one of the key concerns for the policymakers.
How can a tax cut eliminate a recessionary gap?
Fiscal policy means using either taxes or government spending to stabilize the economy. Expansionary fiscal policy can close recessionary gaps (using either decreased taxes or increased spending) and contractionary fiscal policy can close inflationary gaps (using either increased taxes or decreased spending).
Is a recessionary or inflationary gap bad for an economy?
For an economy with a recessionary gap, unacceptably high levels of unemployment will persist for too long a time. For an economy with an inflationary gap, the increased prices that occur as the short-run aggregate supply curve shifts upward impose too high an inflation rate in the short run.
What do you mean by demand pull and cost push inflation?
Cost-push inflation is the decrease in the aggregate supply of goods and services stemming from an increase in the cost of production. Demand-pull inflation is the increase in aggregate demand, categorized by the four sections of the macroeconomy: households, business, governments, and foreign buyers.
What is the difference between demand pull inflation and cost push inflation?
Demand pull inflation arises when the aggregate demand becomes more than the aggregate supply in the economy. Cost pull inflation occurs when aggregate demand remains the same but there is a decline in aggregate supply due to external factors that cause rise in price levels.
What are the effects of cost-push inflation?
Cost-push inflation occurs when overall prices increase (inflation) due to increases in the cost of wages and raw materials. Higher costs of production can decrease the aggregate supply (the amount of total production) in the economy.