Syria`s foreign minister Walid Al-Moualem accused Israel of not intending to build peace in the region. Jon Decker reports.
OpinionJournal.com`s Brendan Miniter interviews U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwalb recites the benefits from expanded free trade agreements. (Sept. 28).
Major stock indexes traded lower early Friday and were near session lows. (OII, OTEX, CRNT)
Inflation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the concept in cosmology, see cosmic inflation.
Inflation rates around the world.
Annual inflation rates in the U.S., 1666-2004.
Inflation is defined as the increase in the price of some set of goods and services in a given economy over a period of time. It is measured as the percentage rate of change of a price index.[1]
Mainstream economists overwhelmingly agree that high rates of inflation are caused by high rates of growth of the money supply. Views on the factors that determine moderate rates of inflation, especially in the short run, are more varied: changes in inflation are sometimes attributed mostly to changes in the real demand or supply of goods and services, and sometimes to changes in the supply or demand for money. In the mid-twentieth century, two camps disagreed strongly on the main causes of inflation (at moderate rates): the "monetarists" argued that money supply dominated all other factors in determining inflation, while "Keynesians" argued that real demand was often more important than changes in the money supply.
A variety of inflation measures are in use, because there are many different price indices, designed to measure different sets of prices that affect different people. Two widely known indices for which inflation rates are commonly reported are the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which measures nominal consumer prices, and the GDP deflator, which measures the nominal prices of goods and services produced by a given country or region.