There are also several specific types of price fluctuations in the economy, such as disinflation, reflation and stagflation. |
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Today's strong productivity helps protect the economy from the ravages of stagflation because it allows companies to make more with less. |
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It was my disillusionment with the lack of economic opportunities associated with stagflation that politicized me. |
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Just as the Depression spawned Keynesianism, and the 1970s stagflation fuelled a backlash, creative destruction is already under way. |
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But from there we had Watergate, stagflation, oil embargos, eroding American power in the world, growing income inequality, etc. |
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This reaction will induce a stagflation process, until the real wage level equals to the available real wage. |
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He turned the tables on the 1929 crash and suggested that stagflation was caused by too much money in the system. |
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Economist Peter Morici of the University of Maryland takes the stagflation debate a step further. |
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Which is not something most people expected from him when he was struggling with stagflation. |
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The return of 1970s stagflation increasingly is being recognized as a possibility. |
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A higher than expected pass through of high energy and labour costs results in a temporary stagflation environment. |
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The episode is a classic stagflation, with inflation going up and the economy, down. |
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In addition, fears of stagflation weighed heavily on cyclical stocks in particular. |
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Less than a generation ago, a large part of the western world was laid low, diagnosed with stagflation. |
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Declining business performances and soaring consumer prices indicate that the nation could suffer stagflation with low economic growth and high inflation this year. |
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In the US, inflation, unemployment, and interest rates soared, casting the economy into stagflation. |
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Think of this as the obverse of 1970s-style stagflation, which brought us little or no growth, high inflation and high interest rates at the same time. |
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Together with growing inflationary pressure, there is increasing concern over global economic downturn and stagflation. |
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How will the prospect of inflation, deflation or stagflation factor into commodity pricing? |
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Action now is crucial to ensure the UK isn't gripped by stagflation, with the economy in the slow lane but inflation rising. |
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It was only part way towards the successful reinvention of itself when recession, stagflation, and the oil shocks buffeted the economy of North America. |
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Although this was the orthodox macroeconomic prescription at the time, the resulting stagflation surprised economists and central bankers. |
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A particularly tricky situation for monetary policy makers, called stagflation, occurs when the economy is slowing down and inflation is rising too fast. |
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Even Mr Putin may be able to ride out stagflation for a while. |
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It is known as Keynesian economics, spending to prop up the government, put it on the demand side, and end up with stagflation, higher unemployment rates, lower productivity, no growth, no future, no plan. |
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In short, the overall macroeconomic picture in 2008 was characterized by stagflation, reduced growth, higher inflation and worsening budget and current account deficits. |
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In the early summer of 2008 high headline inflation, caused by fast rising commodity prices combined with slowing U. S. economic activity, raised the sceptre of potential stagflation. |
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We find that, consistent with the data, the model predicts stagflation. |
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A sharp move from stagflation in July to disinflation in October. |
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In view of the stagflation that is threatening the European Union, it is an important, positive step that the largest heading in the budget is now the section dealing with growth, employment, innovation and cohesion. |
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For countries that are net importers of such commodities, this rise in prices has triggered the dreaded phenomenon of stagflation where inflation and stagnation of economic growth are combined. |
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However, following the stagflation of the 1970s, policymakers began to be attracted to policy rules. |
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In the 1980s, the narrative was the end of stagflation and middle-class tax bracket creep. |
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In the wake of the 1973 oil crisis and the 1979 energy crisis, stagflation began to afflict the economy. |
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The postwar boom ended in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and the situation was worsened by the rise of stagflation. |
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Not long ago, Turkey was faced with stagflation but now it has a strong currency and its economy is thriving. |
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The two began having extended discussions about how to overcome stagflation via dollar stability and tax cuts. |
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The official said that Russia was suffering from stagflation, a mix of stubbornly high inflation and flat economic growth. |
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We, similar to many other places in the world, are caught in a classic stagflation situation. |
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However, the Russian economy began stagnating in late 2013 and in combination with the War in Donbass is in danger of entering stagflation, slow growth and high inflation. |
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