Inflation, Its Causes, Types, Stagflation & Deflation Explained in simple words
What is Inflation?
Inflation means a general increase in prices of goods and services in an economy over time. It reduces the value of money β what βΉ100 could buy before, now buys less.
π Causes of Inflation
πΉ Demand-Pull Inflation (Due to High Demand):
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Increase in consumer spending
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Rise in government expenditure
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Cheap credit availability (low interest)
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Export boom
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Population increase
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Future price expectations
πΉ Cost-Push Inflation (Due to High Costs):
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Wage hike for workers
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Expensive raw materials
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Higher fuel and power costs
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Natural calamities
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High business taxes
π Types of Inflation (Based on Rate of Rise)
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Creeping Inflation β slow (1β3%)
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Walking Inflation β moderate (3β10%)
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Running Inflation β fast (10β20%)
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Galloping Inflation β very fast (20β1000%)
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Hyperinflation β extremely high (1000%+)
πΈ Based on Causes
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Demand-Pull Inflation β Too much demand
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Cost-Push Inflation β Expensive supply
π§ Deflation
Opposite of inflation.
Prices fall continuously β consumers delay buying β businesses earn less β economy slows.
π Stagflation
A rare condition when:
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Inflation is high
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Growth is low
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Unemployment is high
π Prices rise even when economy is weak.
π Inter-Sectoral Linkages
Meaning: The way different sectors of the economy (agriculture, industry, and services) are connected and affect each other.
Types of Linkages:
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Forward Linkage:
Output of one sector becomes input for another.
Example: Cotton (from agriculture) used by textile industry. -
Backward Linkage:
One sector depends on another for raw materials or inputs.
Example: Construction needs cement, bricks from industry. -
Consumption Linkage:
Increased income in one sector boosts demand for goods from another.
Example: Farmers earning more β buy more bikes, TVs, etc. -
Investment Linkage:
Growth in one sector attracts investment in others.
Example: Growth in IT sector β investment in education, infrastructure.