suppressed inflation - traducción al holandés
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suppressed inflation - traducción al holandés

SUSTAINED INCREASE IN A NATION'S MONEY SUPPLY
Inflation (monetary); Monetary Inflation; Inflation risk

suppressed inflation      
onderdrukte inflatie (poging prijsstijging te belemmeren door ingrijpen van de regering)
runaway inflation         
  • M2 money supply]] increases Year/Year}}
  • The U.S. effective [[federal funds rate]] charted over fifty years
  • Core PCE}}
  • Inflation and the growth of money supply (M2)
  • US prices of crude oil and gasoline in February and March, 2022
  • Restaurant increasing prices by $1.00 due to inflation
  • Low-cost price adjustment
  • krona]] gold coins from the [[Scandinavian Monetary Union]], a historical example of an international gold standard
  • url-status=live }}</ref>
  • US historical inflation (in blue) and deflation (in green) from the mid-17th century to the beginning of the 21st.
  • U.S. corporate profits as a proportion of GDP (blue) and year-over-year change in the Consumer Price Index (red) 2017-2022
  • Inflation rates among members of the [[International Monetary Fund]] in October 2022.
RISE IN PRICE LEVEL IN AN ECONOMY OVER TIME
Economy/Inflation; Inflation (economics); Economic inflation; Inflation rate; Price Inflation; Price level stability; Cash inflation; Threshold Inflation; Inflation rates; Zero inflation; Ingflation; Price Trends; World inflation crisis; Inflations; Effect of inflation; Price inflation; Inflation (financial); Causes of inflation in Trinidad and Tobago; Economics/Inflation; Causes of inflation in trinidad and tobago; Costs of inflation; Inflation (prices); Mixflation; Food inflation; Currency inflation; Causes of inflation; Runaway inflation; Inflation expectations; Inflationary expectations; Expected inflation; Negative deflation
weglopende/galopperende inflatie (snelle daling in geldwaarde, voortdurende verhoging v. prijzen)
demand-pull inflation         
TYPE OF INFLATION WHERE AGGREGATE DEMAND INCREASES FASTER THAN AGGREGATE SUPPLY
Economics/Demand pull; Demand-pull Inflation; Demand pull inflation; Demand–pull inflation; Demand Pull Inflation; Demand inflation
Vraaginflatie (omhooggang van prijzen door vraag naar goederen)

Definición

inflation
n.
1) to cause inflation
2) to control, curb inflation
3) creeping; double-digit; galloping, rampant, runaway, uncontrolled inflation

Wikipedia

Monetary inflation

Monetary inflation is a sustained increase in the money supply of a country (or currency area). Depending on many factors, especially public expectations, the fundamental state and development of the economy, and the transmission mechanism, it is likely to result in price inflation, which is usually just called "inflation", which is a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services.

There is general agreement among economists that there is a causal relationship between monetary inflation and price inflation. But there is neither a common view about the exact theoretical mechanisms and relationships, nor about how to accurately measure it. This relationship is also constantly changing, within a larger complex economic system. So there is a great deal of debate on the issues involved, such as how to measure the monetary base and price inflation, how to measure the effect of public expectations, how to judge the effect of financial innovations on the transmission mechanisms, and how much factors like the velocity of money affect the relationship. Thus, there are different views on what could be the best targets and tools in monetary policy.

However, there is a general consensus on the importance and responsibility of central banks and monetary authorities in setting public expectations of price inflation and in trying to control it.

  • Keynesian economists believe the central bank can sufficiently assess the detailed economic variables and circumstances in real time to adjust monetary policy in order to stabilize gross domestic product. These economists favor monetary policies that attempt to even out the ups and downs of business cycles and economic shocks in a precise fashion.
  • Followers of the monetarist school think that Keynesian style monetary policies produce many overshooting, time-lag errors and other unwanted effects, usually making things even worse. They doubt the central bank's capacity to analyse economic problems in real time and its ability to influence the economy with correct timing and the right monetary policy measures. So monetarists advocate a less intrusive and less complex monetary policy, specifically a constant growth rate of the money supply.
  • Some followers of Austrian School economics see monetary inflation as "inflation" and advocate either the return to free markets in money, called free banking, or a 100% gold standard and the abolition of central banks to control this problem.

Currently, most central banks follow a monetarist or Keynesian approach, or more often a mix of both. There is a trend of central banks towards the use of inflation targeting.