Hawkish discussions of inflation expectations today, and their potential effects on actual inflation in the future, remember the conclusion but seem to have forgotten the argument. Expectations of high future inflation lead to high actual inflation in the future only if workers and firms are able to pass that expected price rise through to their own contracts.
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Suppose that I'm setting my price for the next year, and that I expect the overall level of prices including things like the average price of competing goods to rise 10 percent over the course of the year. Then I'm probably going to set my price about 5 percent higher than I would if I were only taking current conditions into account.
And that's not the whole story: because temporarily fixed prices are only revised at intervals, their resets often involve catchup. Again, suppose that I set my prices once a year, and there's an overall inflation rate of 10 percent. Then at the time I reset my prices, they'll probably be about 5 percent lower than they "should" be; add that effect to the anticipation of future inflation, and I'll probably mark up my price by 10 percent even if supply and demand are more or less balanced right now.
Now imagine an economy in which everyone is doing this. What this tells us is that inflation tends to be self-perpetuating, unless there's a big excess of either supply or demand. In particular, once expectations of, say, persistent 10 percent inflation have become "embedded" in the economy, it will take a major period of slack years of high unemployment to get that rate down.
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