FGV Administração 2011 – Questão 45

Linguagens / Inglês / Text Comprehension / Extract important information from the text
THE FINANCIAL PAGE
James Surowiecki
1     People really, really hate inflation. In polls, voters regularly cite high prices, as one of their biggest concerns, even when inflation is low. A 2001 study that looked at the “macroeconomics of happiness” found that higher inflation put a severe dent in how happy people reported themselves to be. The distaste for inflation is such that a 1996 study (titled, aptly, ‘Why Do People Dislike Inflation?”), by the Yale economist Robert Shiller, found that, in countries around the world, sizable majorities said that they would prefer low inflation and high unemployment to high inflation and low unemployment, even if that meant that millions of extra people would go without work.
2    Weimar-style hyperinflation is, of course, an awful thing. But people loathe inflation even in moderate doses, where the evidence suggests it does little damage. The best estimates of the cost of inflation find that even a ten-per-cent inflation rate – much higher than anyone is currently pushing for – shrinks consumption by just 0.1 to 0.8 per cent. There are other costs, to be sure: inflation shrinks the value of people’s savings, and uncertainty about future prices makes business decisions less efficient. There’s also the risk of inflation getting out of control. But the historical record suggests that the risk of three-percent inflation turning into hyperinflation is very small.
3    So why is inflation unpopular? The biggest reason, Shiller found, was simply that people believe higher prices reduce their standard of living and make them “poorer.” This is obviously true for people living on fixed incomes or off their savings, but  for  everyone else, as many studies have shown, inflation translates into higher incomes as well as higher prices, and it typically doesn’t have much of an effect either way on people’s standard of living. (After all, we’ve had sixty years of inflation in the postwar era, yet we’re much more prosperous than we were in 1950.) That’s not how it feels, though: myopia leads us to focus on how much more we have to pay, rather than on how much more we earn. Inflation also sets off other alarm bells. It often increases uncertainty, which most people are averse to, and, because it can be described as “weakening” a country’s currency, it affects morale. Shiller found that people associated rising inflation with dwindling social cohesion. There’s also a moral dimension: we connect inflation to a lack of discipline and failure to live within our means. The
most striking thing about Shiller’s study was that no one surveyed mentioned any possible benefits of inflation, even though to Americans currently besieged by debts it would be a lifesaver. The New Yorker, September 27, 2010.
According to the information in the article, Robert Shiller’s study (“Why do People Dislike Inflation?”)
a) is considered the definitive work on people’s beliefs and misconceptions about inflation.
b) makes a clear distinction between the effects of “good” inflation and the effects of “bad” inflation.
c) presents conclusive proof that inflation does more harm than good.
d) shows through various interviews how a high inflation rate encourages unethical behavior.
e) is surprising in that no person interviewed had anything positive to say about inflation.

Veja outras questões semelhantes:

UNESP 2009 – Questão 74
Zuurbier descreve da seguinte maneira o processo dinâmico entre atividades ilegais e a expansão da agricultura na Amazônia: ...
UERJ 2012 – Questão 19
In the third and fourth paragraphs, there are different sensory images, as in the fragment below: I breathed in the delicious smell of the steam rising from the pot. In this fragment, the narrator makes use of the following type of imagery: a) olfactory b) gustatory c) acoustic d) tactile
Base dudow 2000 – Questão 13
My pals every time ................................. stupid questions about my faith, so I just .............................. from beside them. a) Pick up – bring up b) Turn up – give out c) Bring up – go out d) Put up – turn up e) Bring up – pick up
UERJ 2007 – Questão 20
In the comic strip, Cathy is trying to reconcile with her mother.Lack of understanding between them is best expressed graphically by: a) local setting b) age difference c) facial expressions d) negative comments
UERJ 2012 – Questão 20
According to the text, the use of the expression "clean coal" might infuriate ecologists. This idea is explicit in: a) these euphemisms are "swindles" and "perversions". b) The term just doesn’t seem sincere. c) It’s a red rag to any green. d) A clearer term would be less provocative.