Academic literature on the topic 'Inflation Conflicting-claims Macroeconomics'

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Journal articles on the topic "Inflation Conflicting-claims Macroeconomics"

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SETTERFIELD, MARK. "The rise, decline and rise of incomes policies in the US during the post-war era: an institutional-analytical explanation of inflation and the functional distribution of income." Journal of Institutional Economics 3, no. 2 (2007): 127–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1744137407000665.

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Abstract:This paper is based on the premise that at any point in time, macroeconomic performance is best understood in terms of certain ‘fundamental’ features of the income-generating process that are embedded in a relatively enduring institutional framework, that both affects and is affected by macroeconomic outcomes themselves. This results in the evolution of capitalist economies through a succession of discrete, medium-term episodes of macroeconomic performance. The purpose of the paper is to apply this vision to the explanation of inflation and the functional distribution of income in the
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Stirati, Antonella. "The Godley–Tobin Memorial Lecture." Review of Keynesian Economics 13, no. 1 (2025): 1–20. https://doi.org/10.4337/roke.2025.01.01.

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After illustrating the main macroeconomic features of the NAIRU and some paradoxes arising from its empirical estimates, the paper assesses the literature on hysteresis: how, on the one hand, it casts doubts on the existence of a NAIRU and, on the other hand, how it has been dealt with in mainstream literature as a ‘distortion’ mostly occurring, asymmetrically, after recessions. By contrast, it is argued that the analytical and empirical foundations of the tendency of the economy to return to the NAIRU are analytically unsound and empirically weak: market forces or monetary policy cannot be re
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Razmi, Arslan. "Conflict fuels inflation but the tinder lies elsewhere: Eclectic structuralist thoughts in a developing economy context." Metroeconomica, May 15, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/meca.12462.

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AbstractDeveloping country inflation is in the headlines again. Mainstream macroeconomics typically ignores the role of conflict while non‐mainstream work tends to ignore macroeconomic constraints. This paper revisits the issue employing a dependent economy framework with eclectic characteristics. Specifically, I explore the mechanisms that propagate both real and monetary sources of inflation in the presence of real wage resistance and distributional conflict. The analysis shows that the inability to pay for subsidies with taxes or bond issuance in a stylized developing economy could create a
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Proaño, Christian R., Giorgos Galanis, and Juan Carlos Peña. "On the macro-political dynamics of conflict inflation." Journal of Economic Interaction and Coordination, November 14, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11403-024-00432-0.

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AbstractIn recent times, the notion that inflation may be the result of conflicting claims by workers and capitalists over the distribution of income has experienced a revival in the academic and policy debate. Against this background, we investigate in this paper the macrodynamics of conflict inflation without and with the additional influence of the political sphere in an extended version of the baseline model of behavioral political cycles proposed by Galí (J Econ Behav Organ 212:50–67, 2023). By means of numerical simulations, we illustrate the reaction of main macroeconomic variables to t
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Taylor, Lance, and Nelson H. Barbosa-Filho. "Inflation? It’s Import Prices and the Labor Share!" Institute for New Economic Thinking Working Paper Series, January 20, 2021, 1–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.36687/inetwp145.

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Recognizing that inflation of the value of output and its costs of production must be equal, we focus on a cost-based macroeconomic structuralist approach in contrast to micro-oriented monetarist analysis. For decades the import and profit shares of cost have risen, while the wage share has declined to around 50% with money wage increases lagging the sum of growth rates of prices and productivity. Conflicting claims to income are the underlying source of inflationary pressure. Inflation affects income (labor’s spending power) and wealth. Monetarist theory around 1900 concentrated on the latter
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Inflation Conflicting-claims Macroeconomics"

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lucas, gustavo daou. "Three Essays on Inflation." Doctoral thesis, Università di Siena, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11365/1033356.

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In the first chapter we develop a model where firms' desired markups are determined through a bargaining between employees and employers, whose outside option is the interest rate on costs - that is, the interest rate is an opportunity cost for investing production through employing labor and, thus, becomes a source of markup shock. Firms set a price targeting this real desired markup but just some firms are able to fully protect real profits from expected inflation. Nominal wages are determined by an indexation to expected inflation coefficient, autonomous wage pressures and unemployment leve
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