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Securities > Inflation Rate
The following information is about Inflation Rate.
Inflation Rate Defined
The rate of increase in the price of goods and services. Commonly used measures of the rate of inflation are the Consumer Price Index, the Producer Price Index, and the GNP deflator.
This definition is in context to Securities. See more contextual defintions for Inflation Rate.
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Off-site Inflation Rate Links, User Submitted
The following links have been collected through user bookmark submission in the Inflation Rate category. Please note, because these resources are off-site we cannot guarantee the accuracy or quality of any information.
Tue Nov 18
- Consumer Inflation drops to 4.5%: Consumer Inflation has fallen from a 16 year high down from 5.2% to 4.5%
Sat Nov 15
Thu Nov 6
- Inflation Hits India - TRCB: Due to global crisis, United States western allies in Europe and his Asian partner India is getting hit by 'Inflatio n' increasing more than 10.72 per cent at the end of forty third week of 2008.
Sun Oct 19
- Economist̵ 7;s Predict Interest Rates Could Be Cut Bellow 2 Percent: A leading economist predicts the UK base rate of interest could be cut to its lowest levels ever
Wed Oct 15
- Food prices dropping: Importers and analysts say the prices are off their peaks for good and stability has returned to the market. Prices are slated to fall further before levelling out, though they are unlikely to be as low as a year or two ago.
Tue Oct 14
Wed Oct 8
- Bowyer: Bernanke's Pretend Rate Cut - CNBC Guest Blog - CNBC.com: The first thing that you need to know is that bank panics are inherently deflationary. They were in 1879; they were in 1837 and they were in 1929. Even if there is plenty of money on the national balance sheet, you get deflation when money gets hoarded. Taking the money out of active circulation has the same effect as shrinking the money supply. This means that the central bank must aggressively add money to the system in times of panic. It also means that it must aggressively take money out of the system in times of recovery. Under normal monetary policy it takes a long time for new money to work its way from the ?printing press? to final consumer purchases. But panics are different, since they deal with the circulation of money that is already out there in the economy, panics can cause very sudden deflation, and recoveries can cause very sudden inflation. The fed needs to be agile in order to deal with this.
Thu Oct 2
Tue Sep 9
Thu Aug 7
- Fed unlikely to change rates until next year: UNITED States Federal Reserve policymakers have indicated that interest rates will not be budging until next year, as they wait for the credit crisis to abate and inflation to ease.
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Off-site Inflation Rate Research Links
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