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A clear guide explaining inflation expectations and their role in price stability and monetary policy.
Inflation expectations refer to how households, businesses, and investors anticipate future price changes and adjust their economic behaviour accordingly.
Definition
Inflation Expectations describe beliefs about the future rate of inflation, which influence spending, saving, wage-setting, pricing decisions, and investment behaviour across the economy.
Inflation expectations affect economic outcomes because individuals and firms act based on what they believe prices will do in the future. If inflation is expected to rise, consumers may spend sooner, and businesses may raise prices and wages pre-emptively.
Central banks closely monitor inflation expectations to assess policy credibility. When expectations remain anchored, inflation tends to stay stable. When expectations become unanchored, inflation can accelerate rapidly, even without strong demand growth.
In hyperinflationary or stagflationary contexts, expectations often deteriorate quickly, reinforcing price instability and weakening policy control.
Because they influence behaviour that can either stabilise or accelerate inflation.
Through surveys, market-based indicators, and inflation-linked securities.
Yes. If expectations become widespread, they can drive actual price increases.