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A clear explanation of why the Phillips Curve can fail and what it means for inflation and employment policy.
A Phillips Curve breakdown occurs when the traditional inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment weakens or disappears, reducing the curve’s usefulness as a policy guide.
Definition
Phillips Curve Breakdown refers to a situation where changes in unemployment no longer reliably predict inflation outcomes, often due to structural shifts, supply shocks, or changing inflation expectations.
The Phillips Curve historically suggested that lower unemployment would lead to higher inflation and vice versa. This relationship guided monetary policy for decades.
However, repeated supply shocks, globalisation, labour market changes, and well-anchored inflation expectations have weakened this link. Inflation can rise even when unemployment is high, or remain low despite tight labour markets.
During such periods, policymakers face greater uncertainty, as standard tools based on labour market slack provide less reliable signals about future inflation.
No. It means the relationship is unstable or context-dependent rather than permanently invalid.
Because it reduces the reliability of unemployment as a predictor of inflation.
Yes, under certain economic conditions, but it may differ from past patterns.