ydinflaation
Ydinflaation is a term used in some economic discussions to describe a form of inflation that arises from the interaction between financial market yields, borrowing costs, and demand for goods and services. It is not a standard macroeconomic category, but a concept intended to capture how shifts in asset yields and related monetary conditions can feed into price dynamics beyond traditional channels such as wage growth or raw material costs.
The central idea is that changes in yields on government and corporate bonds influence borrowing rates, the
Measurement of ydinflaation relies on a combination of financial market indicators (yield curves, credit spreads, term
Policy relevance centers on how central banks and fiscal authorities interpret and respond to financial-condition-driven inflation.
See also: inflation, monetary policy, financial conditions, yield curve, wealth effect.