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cost-push
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cost-push (kôst'pʊsh')
n.
Inflation in which increased production costs, as from higher wages, tend to drive prices up.
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Cost-Push Inflation
A phenomenon where general level of prices rise (inflation) due to increases in the cost of wages and raw materials.
Investopedia Says:
Cost-push inflation develops because the higher costs of production factors decreases in aggregate supply (the amount of total production) in the economy. Since there are fewer goods being produced (supply weakens), and demand for these goods remains consistent, prices of finished goods increases (inflation).
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Home > Library > Business > Finance and Investment Dictionary
Cost-Push Inflation
Inflation caused by rising prices, which follow on the heels of rising costs. This is the sequence: When the demand for raw materials exceeds the supply, prices go up. As manufacturers pay more for these raw materials they raise the prices they charge merchants for the finished products, and the merchants in turn raise the prices they charge consumers. See also Demand-Pull Inflation; Inflation.
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Cost push inflation
Cost-push inflation or supply-shock inflation is a type of inflation caused by large increases in the cost of important goods or services where no suitable alternative is available. A situation that has been often cited of this was the oil crisis of the 1970s, which some economists see as a major cause of the inflation experienced in the Western world in that decade. It is argued that this inflation resulted from increases in the cost of petroleum imposed by the member states of OPEC. Since petroleum is so important to industrialized economies, a large increase in its price can lead to the increase in the price of most products, raising the inflation rate. This can raise the normal or built-in inflation rate, reflecting adaptive expectations and the price/wage spiral, so that a supply shock can have persistent effects.
Austrian school economists such as Murray N. Rothbard and monetary economists such as Milton Friedman argue against the concept of cost-push inflation because they believe that increases in the cost of goods and services do not lead to inflation without the government and its central bank cooperating in increasing the money supply. The argument is that if the money supply is constant, increases in the cost of a good or service will decrease the money available for other goods and services, and therefore the price of some those goods will fall and offset the rise in price of those goods whose prices have increased. One consequence of this is that monetarist economists do not believe that the rise in the cost of oil was a direct cause of the inflation of the 1970s. They argue that although the price of oil went back down in the 1980s, there was no corresponding deflation.
Keynesians riposte that in a modern industrial economy, many prices are sticky downward or downward inflexible, so that instead of prices falling in this story, a supply shock would cause a recession, i.e., rising unemployment and falling gross domestic product. It is the costs of such a recession that likely causes governments and central banks to allow a supply shock to result in inflation. They also note that though there was no deflation in the 1980s, there was a definite fall in the inflation rate during this period. Actual deflation was prevented because supply shocks are not the only cause of inflation; in terms of the modern triangle model of inflation, supply-driven deflation was counteracted by demand pull inflation and built-in inflation resulting from adaptive expectations and the price/wage spiral.
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Translations for: Cost-push
- cost-push inflation (Fin) inflation par les coûts
- cost-push inflation Inflation, die eine Preiserhöhung verursacht, als Resultat einer Erhöhung der, Produktionskosten
- cost-push inflation costo-alza inflacionaria
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