With so much of talk about inflation and RBI’s monetary policy, so here’s the low down and again in a multi-part series.
We all know that inflation makes things more expensive, reduces purchasing power, gives enough headaches to governments all around (including being the cause for governments to fall), etc.
Inflation in simplest terms is got to do with ‘supply of money’. It is more money chasing limited items; it’s about people spending more than they are saving.
Here’s an example:
There are 3 friends (Alpha, Beta, Gamma), of different socio-economic backgrounds.
All of them make purchases needed for living (all these items are finite and limited in quantity and are impacted by economies of demand-supply) – fruits, vegetables, fuel, etc.
Let’s take petrol as the item they would like to buy. All 3 friends, by virtue their socio-economic backgrounds will be willing to pay different amounts for the same item.
Alpha has Rs. 3,000/-, Beta has Rs. 5,000/- and Gamma has Rs. 10,000/- of ‘money power’ they are willing to spend. Since the supply of petrol is limited, Gamma has the maximum power of ‘affordability’. The other 2 guys will possibly chose to use public transport :-).
The sheer power of ‘affordability’ makes items expensive for many people.
And why will petrol be an ‘unreasonable’ price in the first place? Remember, a producer of an item (in this case Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries aka OPEC) will always want to sell at the maximum possible value as long as there are consumers to pay for it.
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