The Daily - Inflation Lessons From the 1970s
Episode Date: March 16, 2022With prices on the rise in the U.S. economy, the Federal Reserve is expected to announce on Wednesday an increase in interest rates, essentially pouring a cold glass of water on the economy.Why would ...the central bank do that? The answer lies in the inflation crisis of the 1970s, when a failure to react quickly enough still looms large in the memory.Guest: Jeanna Smialek, a reporter covering the Federal Reserve and the economy for The New York Times.Have you lost a loved one during the pandemic? The Daily is working on a special episode memorializing those we have lost to the coronavirus. If you would like to share their name on the episode, please RECORD A VOICE MEMO and send it to us at thedaily@nytimes.com. You can find more information and specific instructions here.Background reading: The Federal Reserve is facing the fastest inflation most Americans have ever seen. The response may require some aggressive — and painful — measures.What is inflation, why is it up, and whom does it hurt? Here’s what to know.Want more from The Daily? For one big idea on the news each week from our team, subscribe to our newsletter. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Later today, the U.S. government is expected to deploy its most powerful tool for fighting
inflation, knowing full well that it will weaken the economy.
knowing full well that it will weaken the economy.
I spoke with my colleague, Gina Smilak, about why that is,
and the painful lesson from a previous era that has convinced American policymakers that this is the right path. It's Wednesday, March 16th.
Gina, the Federal Reserve, in just a few hours we think,
is going to raise interest rates in order to lower inflation in the American economy.
Can you just help us understand the mechanics of that?
How does that work?
So, as everyone knows, prices are rising really quickly right now
on cars, on meat, on couches.
And there are a few reasons for that.
The government spent a lot of money at the start of the pandemic and throughout last year to sort of blunt the impact of the coronavirus and its effect on workers.
Right. There were stimulus checks, for example.
Exactly. And that spending fueled really strong demand. Unfortunately, that strong demand collided with supply chains that were all messed up.
Right.
And so there were too many dollars chasing too few goods, and inflation really jumped up. Today, even though the government is spending less, the checks have stopped, the labor market is really strong. And that's helping to sustain this pretty robust
demand. And it's keeping inflation rising. And so we have this real problem where prices have
been going up a lot. And now the Fed is getting worried that inflation is going to get stuck at
this higher rate that they do not want. And so the idea is, if you raise interest rates,
if you make it more expensive to borrow money to buy a car or to borrow money to buy a house, then fewer people will do those things. There will be less
demand and supply will have a chance to catch up, which will allow price increases to slow down a
little bit. Right. When the Fed raises the interest rate, it essentially pours a tall glass of cold
water on the economy. It deliberately tries to slow down spending.
Right. You slow things down to bring inflation under control.
Which has always struck me as kind of strange, because what you're describing is a process of
our own government hurting the economy in order to eventually help the economy.
Right. And so this is the way that central bankers control inflation everywhere.
But here in the United States, there's a good reason why central bankers tend to be especially
attuned to periods where it seems like inflation might hop out of control. And that is because
there's a historical example where they did not react quickly enough to inflation, where inflation
became really painful. And it's this period that kind of haunts the nightmares of central bankers. So tell us the story of that time period that
haunts economists. When did it start? So the story starts in the mid to late 1960s,
really during Lyndon B. Johnson's presidency, when there is just this huge amount of government spending happening.
This administration today, here and now, declares unconditional war on poverty in America.
Johnson famously tried to tackle poverty in this ambitious program called the Great Society.
Our chief weapons in a more pinpointed attack will be better school and better health
and better homes and better training and better job opportunities to help more Americans escape
from squalor and misery. And while that's happening, the country's still engaged in the war in Vietnam. I have told the American people that we would send to Vietnam those forces that are required to accomplish our mission there.
And that's also increasing government spending by billions and billions of dollars.
Two and a half billion dollars in this fiscal year.
And two billion six hundred million in the next fiscal year.
So there's a lot of government money pouring into the economy, and inflation just starts
to gradually ratchet up year after year.
And many economists think that the government spending from the 1960s helped to kick off
that process.
But then inflation keeps on rising.
Spiraling inflation now appears to be a fixture
in the American economy, and it's casting a shadow
on the American dream of doing better and better every year.
By the 1970s, this spiraling inflation
had another important effect on Americans.
The nation was developing a psychology of inflation.
The seller asks more than he needs,
hoping to cover the cost increase that's sure to come,
and the buyer buys now,
because the price will only get worse later.
People began to change the way they thought about their money,
the way they thought about inflation.
Why aren't people saving these days?
The psychology is, well, tomorrow everything is going to cost me more.
It's an inflation psychology.
I better buy now, and the heck with saving. So Americans began to feel like their money wasn't
going to go as far because prices were so high. And they began to ask for higher wages to cover
their rising expenses. And you saw that as companies had to pay more, they started charging
more to cover their costs. And we ended up in a situation where prices and wages were in this upward spiral
and they were kind of chasing each other. And so that proceeds through the 1970s. And we're
really seeing these very, very rapid price increases on a year-over-year basis.
And it's worth pausing just a moment to understand what high inflation like that actually feels like.
Groceries are a good example because they bounced around a lot, but at times hit double-digit inflation in the 1970s.
Given those rates, if you had a $100 grocery order in 1970, it would have cost about $170 in 1978 to buy the same exact things.
Wow.
We're in an energy crisis now, and will be for some time to come.
We have at present an absolute shortage of natural gas.
And during the 1970s, both in the early 70s and then in 79, there were oil embargoes.
Petrol stations can no longer afford to fill up cars whose tanks take 20 gallons.
The monsters are dying of thirst.
The energy crisis is killing them.
And so when those happened, they sort of supercharged this already very high inflation
and pushed the cost of gas up quite a lot.
And so, you know, between gas and food and all of these sort of day-to-day necessities,
you just saw a wide variety of consumer goods starting to become more expensive. You know, it really became sort of this economy-wide
problem where prices for everything were going up and it wasn't clear how it was going to end.
And how did Americans feel about all this inflation?
Americans did not feel good about all of this inflation, especially in the 1970s when it
started really hitting oil
prices because they are just so visible. You see them up on a price board and it just was such a
big part of people's everyday lives. So people are angry about it. It is just everywhere in
the culture. You know, you see it in old magazine articles, you see it in comic strips.
Comedians are making jokes about it. And now, folks, the host of The Price is Wrong, consumer specialist David Horowitz.
Comedians are making jokes about it.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
And welcome to The Price is Wrong, the game that deals with your survival and self-respect in these inflationary times.
It shows up in All in the Family, the sitcom.
Get away from me.
Get away from me.
It's the administration that's causing all your problems. Where do you think your inflation comes from? the family, the sitcom. And. government do to address this?
Not as much as you might think.
And the reason for that is elected officials are not especially good at cooling down the economy enough to wrestle inflation under control.
Because obviously, if you want to win re-election,
you do not want to slow down your economy and possibly tip it into a recession. And so politicians talk about it a lot, but they really don't sort of roll out any super aggressive
policies that are enough to constrain prices. And then at the same time, you have central bankers
who for various reasons over the years, really just aren't willing to raise interest rates enough and sort of hurt the economy enough to bring prices under control.
And so basically, there's just no sort of concerted government response that is effective at bringing down inflation in these years.
The can keeps getting kicked down the road, and we end up with very high inflation that is sort of embedded in the fabric of society
and feeding on itself.
Right. And no one's willing to do anything about it.
Or at least not enough.
And that was basically the case for a decade until 1979.
President Jimmy Carter's at the helm.
He's struggling to salvage public confidence in his administration.
And the economy is just a disaster.
So he starts to shuffle cabinet members around,
which opens up the top position at the Federal Reserve. And he calls up this candidate named
Paul Volcker. Volcker's already a senior official within the Federal Reserve system.
And there's a few things he's known for. First, he's very tall, six foot seven. He's also frugal.
He likes drugstore cigars.
He wears badly fitted suits.
And he continued driving a car with a broken seat around after he broke it.
And he kind of applies all of that frugality to his economic policy.
Up until this point, he's been pretty frustrated with the Fed's half-hearted attempts to curb inflation.
And he wants the Fed to take a harder line approach.
hearted attempts to curb inflation. And he wants the Fed to take a harder line approach.
So Volcker gets to his Oval Office interview and basically tells Jimmy Carter that if he gets the job, he's going to push interest rates higher. And the clear implication there is that he's going to
support a policy that hurts the economy while Carter is still in office, and that he's not
going to continue to allow inflation to just run out of control the way it's been doing. And so he goes home from this interview absolutely positive that he's not going
to get the job, given what he's just told the president. Right, because he's just told the
president, I'm going to make you unpopular. Exactly, exactly. And so he's flabbergasted
when the next morning his phone rings very early in the morning. He's still in bed and
it's Jimmy Carter. And Carter tells him, hey, you got the job.
And suddenly, Paul Volcker finds himself chairman of the Federal Reserve.
Now, my thesis can be summed up in just a few sentences.
First, we need to bring inflation down and restore price stability.
We need to do it not just for its own sake,
but because lack of confidence in our currency
is incompatible with a productive, growing economy.
We need to build on the consensus
that inflation is at the core of our economic problem,
that it is public enemy number one.
We'll be right back.
So Gina, once Paul Volcker is the head of the Federal Reserve, what does he do? So Paul Volcker basically makes good on what he has promised President Jimmy Carter,
which is he wages a war on inflation.
And we really see that start in earnest in October 1979.
There's this super dramatic scene on a Saturday night.
Paul Volcker decides to hold a press conference which at the time is very rare
the Fed doesn't do a lot of these
and on a Saturday night
and on a Saturday night right
and not just any Saturday night
on a Saturday night when the Pope is in town
and so the Washington press corps
is very you know devoted
to following the Pope around
and Paul Volcker and his communication staff call up the press and say, no, come on down
to the Eccles building.
And Volcker's spokesperson actually has to convince some of the press to show up to this,
including the CBS cameraman, who basically says, you know, I have limited resources and
I'm going to the Pope.
And the press person says, you know, long after the Pope is gone, you're going to remember what happens tonight.
So a lot of drama, a lot of pomp and circumstance. The press comes down and Volcker basically tells
the press that the Fed is going to change how it's setting monetary policy, that they are going to
shake up their whole approach. And the whole goal here is
really just to vanquish inflation, to bring it down once and for all, to really sort of get a
handle on this. This is basically a declaration that things are going to change. Right. And how
does he do it? Volcker was really committed to the idea that you had to crush inflation completely
to get America out of this self-perpetuating cycle. And so he gets aggressive. He took an
interest rate that was already at 10% in 1979 and basically pushed it up to 17.6% within like a year.
By early 1981, his policies push rates up to about 19%. Wow. And soon it's close to 20%.
And that's just this incredibly high interest rate
and has ratcheted up there in an incredibly short amount of time.
And just for a moment, explain what it means
for the interest rate to be almost 20% in the United States
because it's kind of hard to fathom.
So remember, interest rates very directly
translate into how much it costs to buy a house, to borrow to buy a car, or to borrow with a credit
card. So let's just take a house, for example. If you buy a $100,000 house and you're going to
pay it off in 30 years without any interest on that loan, which isn't realistic, but just for
the example, your payment's going to be about $300 a month. Of course, if you're paying a mortgage rate and the interest rate on your loan is 20%,
so around that 1981 level, your payments would be closer to $1,700 a month.
So that could obviously be prohibitively expensive, especially if you're dragging it out over time.
It costs so much to borrow at this stage that you're paying thousands, maybe tens of thousands more
than you previously would have just to buy a car, a house, a boat,
whatever it is that you want to borrow money to buy.
And so people just stop doing it.
They just stop spending money on those things.
And as that happens, America
sinks into recession. Right. And that recession is really painful. How bad? Describe it. Terrible.
They came in all shapes and sizes, all ages and all backgrounds. Almost a thousand of them showed
up at City Hall in Sunny Daisy today. Lined up from one end of the hall to the other, they were all there in response to a help-wanted ad.
Unemployment rose above 10%.
All these people stood in line today and filled out applications at Chattanooga's Employment Security Office.
Just no jobs. Not here in Chattanooga, I guess. You know, no jobs here.
The human impact of what Paul Volcker is
doing with policy is just palpable at this point. People are out of work. People are seeing their
wage growth absolutely crushed. You've got car lots full of cars that just can't sell. You've got
home builders who just can't sell houses. So what you see happening is just this outpouring of anger because people know that
interest rates are the thing inflicting so much damage and so much pain throughout the economy.
They know that this is Fed policy driving this terrible recession. And so people mail two by
fours, homebuilders mail two by fours to the Federal Reserve in protest of the houses they
can't sell. Car dealers mail car keys in protest of the houses they can't sell, car dealers
mail car keys in protest of the cars they can't sell.
And you see at one point farmers actually bring tractors and circle the Fed in Washington
out of protest, you know, of these very high interest rates and the intense pain that is
being felt just throughout the entire economy at this stage.
at this stage.
But Gina, it almost sounds like the cure was worse than the disease.
While inflation was bad,
people were not losing their jobs
or getting priced out of loans for homes and cars
the way they were once interest rates soared, right?
Right. So that is actually a school of thought that it was worse to raise interest rates than
it would have been to let the inflation go. But most economists will tell you that if inflation
would have gone unchecked, it might have gotten worse. And the uncertainty around how much money
was going to be worth in the future could have been really harmful for the economy and just for Americans as a whole. So how do you plan or save if you don't know what a dollar
is going to buy in a year? And so it just wouldn't have been a solid foundation to use to build up
the rest of the economy. And Volcker was very, very aware of how painful this all was. And we
know now that he really agonized over what he was doing to the economy during this period.
In his memoir, he describes this patch of carpet in his office that he literally wore out from pacing it so much.
And he heard a lot of feedback.
You know, people publicly blamed him for just about everything.
There are those who claim Paul Volcker is the real father of this recession.
Mr. Volcker, welcome.
First, are you willing to accept parenthood for this
recession? No, I'll claim no paternity. I don't even like the question being asked that way.
But he didn't stand down. There's this moment that's pretty well known in the nerdy circles
that I run in, when he was prodded on a show called the McNeil-Lehrer Report.
Let's not forget that while people are concerned about a recession right now,
and that's understandable, we have had and still do have a problem of inflation.
And as I suggested earlier, if we fail to deal with that inflation in a constructive way,
I think we can look forward to a lot more economic instability.
The better job we do on inflation, the better this economy will behave over a period of time.
I don't think there's any doubt about that.
And Volcker was encouraging the country to basically keep this bigger picture in mind.
Do you feel that the strategy that you laid out in October to control the money supply
is in fact working?
It's working.
Or you wanted it to?
Yeah, well, it's working in the immediate sense.
We're more perfectly on track,
maybe partly by luck, than one could have imagined. Now, if you look at the economy and you say,
are things going in a beautiful way? Obviously, they're not going in such a beautiful way.
I think overall, he is definitely grappling with the pain he's causing the economy, but he
is sort of remaining dedicated to this broader goal and this broader plan, which is to bring inflation down, even if it costs a lot to do that.
Right. And of course, the biggest question of all is, does this work?
It is very painful, but it does work. We eventually go from 14.6% inflation in March 1980
to closer to 1% inflation by 1986. And so you just see this really rapid, really extreme
deceleration in price increases. And inflation is under control in a way that it hasn't been
in decades. As that happens, you get a lot of really positive knock-on effects
throughout the rest of the economy.
And so consumers start to have much more stable outlooks.
Businesses also start to feel like they can plan ahead
and that they don't have to worry about prices just going crazy.
And as those two things happen, we see it really affecting behavior.
Lately, American consumers have been shopping with
even more vigor than usual. I think everybody's been in a good mood by the looks of the mall.
It looks like it's full of people. Businesses start to sort of invest again. The U.S. economy
continues its seemingly inexorable expansion. Consumers, as interest rates come down alongside
inflation, are able to buy houses again, cars are selling again.
And today's announcement that personal income shot up at the highest rate in five and a half years
comes as the nation's unemployment rate remained near a 30-year low.
Really, by the late 1980s and early 1990s, we're having a really strong, solid, steady growth economy.
A friend of mine told me, try America Online. I said, why? I've got a
computer. Then in the 1990s. Welcome. I don't mind saving for retirement anymore. I can research
mutual funds, chart all my stocks, and do my banking all from home anytime I want. You get
a productivity boom as personal computers come online. And really just we've set the stage for these several decades of very strong, very stable growth. And that is sort of the legacy of this
Volcker era. So it's not a stretch to say that Volcker did, as he promised, slay the dragon of
inflation with this strategy of higher interest rates and showed that hurting the economy
in the short term really does improve the economy in the long term.
I think that that has become sort of the economic consensus in the time since.
Yes, I think people very much attribute the good outcome to Paul Volcker.
since. Yes, I think people very much attribute the good outcome to Paul Volcker. So this does great things for Paul Volcker's reputation in the intervening years. And one person who grew up in
the inflationary era and who is a real big admirer of Paul Volcker is Jay Powell, the current Fed
chair. And Jay Powell has talked publicly about his deep admiration for Paul Volcker. So when you
first became chair, you were seen, you were spotted numerous times carrying Paul Volcker's
book under your arm. When Volcker's autobiography came out a couple of years ago. So I actually
thought I should buy, you know, 500 copies of this book and just hand them out at the Fed.
I didn't do that, but it's a book I
strongly recommend. Hal talked about how he thinks that he and his colleagues should be thinking
about this example as something that they want to emulate. I don't think there has been a greater
public servant in our broad area in our lifetimes. I mean, he really just did exactly what he thought
was the right
thing all the time, and he let the chips fall where they may. You know, we can all hope to
live up to some part of who he is. And so really a long track record of just really looking up to
this former Fed chair and, you know, his long ago predecessor. And if you are somebody like Jay Powell and you study this era closely, as it sounds like Powell did, what is the big lesson of the 1970s and Paul Volcker that Powell would carry into a moment like this?
big overarching lesson is that you don't want to let inflation carry on for so long that it becomes sort of a major part of how people think about the world. Because once that happens, it is so
painful to cure. Powell, like many economists in this era, has really studied sort of the pain
that Volcker had to put the economy through. And nobody wants to see a repeat of that.
It was a really miserable era.
And so I think the lesson is you get out ahead of this early.
You take care of it as soon as it starts to become a problem.
Basically, you don't be the Fed in the 1960s and 1970s
and just let this drag on year after year and kick the can down the road.
You try and take care of it right away.
Right, which is why later today, Powell's going to raise the interest rate just a little,
which will inflict a little bit of pain, you're saying, so that he never has to do what Volcker
did, which is raise it again and again and again and inflict a tremendous amount of pain
on the American worker and the American economy.
Exactly.
Powell is going to nudge the rate up a little bit at this meeting,
and he's probably going to sort of send a signal
that the Fed is going to continue raising interest rates steadily throughout the year.
But the goal here is to maybe eventually raise interest rates up to perhaps 3%.
So nothing like the 20% that Volcker was touching
by the early 1980s.
So instead of a tall glass of cold water
being poured on the economy,
it's kind of like a spritz.
Right.
And the sort of hope and dream here
is to sort of cool off the economy,
to pull down inflation,
to get things under control.
But to do that quickly and to do that in a gentle way
so that you don't have to inflict the tremendous amount of pain
that Paul Volcker did in the 1970s and 1980s.
Well, Gina, thank you very much.
This has been very enlightening.
Thank you for having me.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
In a dramatic show of solidarity with Ukraine,
three European heads of state,
the prime ministers of the Czech Republic, Poland, and Slovenia,
traveled to Kiev on Tuesday,
despite heavy Russian shelling across the city.
Hi, nice to meet you. You're very welcome.
During a briefing, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
thanked the prime ministers
for taking the risk of visiting him
in a war zone.
Our, for example, guys
begin to act lenient
or anti-tank system for people.
In Washington,
the White House said
that President Biden himself
would travel to Europe next week
to show his support for both Ukraine and NATO.
Meanwhile, Russian forces said they had taken control of the entire region of Kherson,
in Ukraine's south, where local officials said that Russian troops
have been rounding up activists who opposed Russia's
presence. Finally, Russia imposed sanctions against 13 American officials, including President Biden,
Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin,
in retaliation for U.S. sanctions against Russian officials.
in retaliation for U.S. sanctions against Russian officials.
Today's episode was produced by Ricky Nowetzki, Diana Nguyen, and Muj Zady.
It was edited by Liz O'Balin, contains original music by Mary Lozano, Alisha Ba'itub, and Dan Powell,
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.