Indexation is a method of controlling the
income-redistributing effects of inflation.
Inflation is a decrease in the purchasing
power of a unit of money. Households
and businesses that supply commodities,
credit, and raw materials under long-term
contracts have revenues and incomes
that are fixed regardless of what is happening
to other prices. In an inflationary
environment, revenues from long-term
contracts diminish in real terms, that is,
in real purchasing power.
Redistributive effects of inflation
significantly harm important players in the
economic system. With inflation, savers
and lenders find their wealth losing
value while in the hands of other
households and businesses. The real
losses to savers and lenders occur
because their wealth is defined in terms
of a unit of money that steadily, perhaps
rapidly, buys less. Debtors stand to gain
windfall profits from inflation that can
reduce the value and burden of a debt,
or, under hyperinflation, even eliminate
a debt in practical terms.
Governments are suspected of generating
inflation as a means of canceling
vast public debts too large to service. In
the aftermath of World War I, the German
government, shouldering a vast
public debt from wartime expenditures
coupled with war reparations, fueled an
episode of hyperinflation that rendered
its pubic debt null and void. The U.S.
government emerged from World War II
with a sizable public debt, perhaps
removing government incentive to
aggressively combat an inflation problem
that continued until the early 1980s.
A system of indexation protects
households and businesses whose wealth
and income are at risk from inflation.
Under indexation, escalator provisions
automatically administer inflation
adjustments to sources of income and
assets fixed in money terms by contract.
In the United States, Social Security
benefits automatically receive inflation
adjustments geared to the Consumer
Price Index, a limited application of the
principle of indexation. Under a fullblown
system of indexation, checking
accounts, savings accounts, long-term
and short-term bonds, mortgages, wages,
and long-term contracts receive periodic
adjustments to keep pace with inflation.
Some economists propose limited
forms of indexation, applying only to
government bonds and taxable income.
This limited indexation automatically
increases the maturity value of government
bonds at a rate equivalent to the inflation rate, and withholds from government
tax revenue paper profits due
only to inflation. With limited indexation,
government is spared the temptation to
generate inflation as a means of canceling
public debt, and levying a hidden tax.
As inflationary momentum increased
during the 1970s, prominent economists,
such as Nobel Prize winner Milton Friedman,
proposed that the United States
adopt a system of indexation. Brazil
implemented a broad system of indexation,
and Israel and Canada adopted indexation
systems on smaller scales. Proponents of
indexation felt it would lift the burden of
forming accurate inflationary expectations
and moderate economic fluctuations
caused by discrepancies between actual
and expected inflation. Strong anti-inflation
policies often induce a bout of high
unemployment because expected inflation
remains high after the actual inflation rate
has fallen. Indexation should moderate the
high unemployment that often accompanies
disinflation. Critics feel that the
adoption of a system of indexation is
equivalent to giving up the fight against
inflation and observe that inflation has
often accelerated in countries practicing
indexation. The United States never
adopted indexation, and as other countries
enacted market-oriented reforms, systems
of indexation began to lose favor as
another form of government interference.