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Disinflation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Disinflation is a decrease in the rate of inflation – a slowdown in the rate of increase of the general price level of goods and services in a nation's gross domestic product over time. It is the opposite of reflation.

If the inflation rate is not very high to start with, disinflation can lead to deflation – decreases in the general price level of goods and services. For example if the annual inflation rate one month is 5% and it is 4% the following month, prices disinflated by 1% but are still increasing at a 4% annual rate. If the current rate is 1% and it is the -2% the following month, prices disinflated by 3% and are decreasing at a 2% annual rate.

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  • Meltzer, A.H. (2006), "From Inflation to More Inflation, Disinflation, and Low Inflation", American Economic Review, 96 (2): 185–188, doi:10.1257/000282806777211900, S2CID 3789479
  • Goodfriend, M.; King, R.G. (2005), "The incredible Volcker disinflation", Journal of Monetary Economics, 52 (5): 981–1015, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.484.439, doi:10.1016/j.jmoneco.2005.07.001
  • Calvo, G.A.; Celasun, O.Y.A.; Kumhof, M. (2003), "Inflation Inertia and Credible Disinflation-The Open Economy Case", NBER Working Paper No. 9557, doi:10.3386/w9557
  • Siklos, P.L.; Waterloo, O.N.; Zhang, Y.; Ottawa, O.N. (2006), "Inflation, Disinflation, and Deflation in China: Identifying the Shocks Driving Inflation" (PDF), Western Economic Association Meetings in San Diego, California, and the Summer Workshop of the Hong Kong Institute for Monetary Research, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03, retrieved 2008-11-17

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