Everyday Economics: History doesn't repeat, but the Fed Is hearing an echo

Everyday Economics: History doesn’t repeat, but the Fed Is hearing an echo

Spread the love

Read this week’s Fed minutes carefully and you’ll hear 1970s.The Fed has stopped debating when to cut. Now it’s debating whether to hold higher for longer — or hike again. A majority of officials said firming could become appropriate if inflation keeps running above 2%. Several said cuts still make sense if disinflation resumes or the labor market cracks. That split is the whole story.Inflation is moving the wrong way. PCE rose 3.5% in March, up from 2.8% in February. Core hit 3.2%. Two supply shocks are still working through the system: tariff pass-through and the energy spike tied to the Strait of Hormuz.Supply shocks don’t hit households all at once. Input costs rise. Firms eat them, margins compress, and eventually they push prices up to defend those margins. That’s when the squeeze jumps from income statements to grocery bills. Consumers are spending more dollars that buy less.Hence the 1970s comparisons – which are half right.The rhyme isn’t another inflation crisis. It’s that the Fed is again fighting inflation it can’t actually fix. Monetary policy can’t pump oil, cut freight costs, or unwind a tariff. It can only crush demand. Blinder’s classic read of the decade found the 1974 and 1979–80 spikes came mostly from special factors – food, energy, mortgage costs, the end of price controls – not the underlying trend. The trap was accommodation: let the shock reset wage- and price-setting, and “special” becomes permanent.So watch expectations, not the headline print.They’re flashing yellow. The New York Fed’s April survey put one-year expectations at 3.6%, up from 3.4%. But three-year held at 3.1% and five-year at 3.0%. The five-year breakeven sits near 2.6% – elevated, not a 1970s de-anchoring. Households feel the pump. They don’t yet believe inflation spirals. That buys the Fed time. It doesn’t buy permission to ignore the risk.Here’s what makes the path narrow: the labor market looks tighter than it feels.Unemployment is low. Layoffs haven’t surged. But hiring has collapsed. The hires rate fell to 3.1% in February – matching the April 2020 pandemic low – before bouncing to 3.5% in March. The Great Recession floor was 2.9%. This is not an overheating economy. It’s low-hire, low-fire. A rate hike wouldn’t land on a boom. It would land on a market where hiring already stalled.That’s the real 1970s lesson, and it isn’t “hike on every oil shock.” The Fed’s mistake then was letting repeated shocks get baked into inflation psychology. The mistake available now is the opposite: hiking into supply-driven inflation before labor demand has actually turned back up.Markets raise the stakes. The 1973–74 bear took the S&P down nearly 50%. Today’s market runs on AI optimism and rich multiples – exactly what breaks when discount rates stay high. Housing rhymes too. In the early ’80s, mortgage rates blew past 18% and nominal home prices barely dipped, while real prices fell hard. Rates hit affordability, volume and mobility long before they hit the sticker. Rates are already high. The market is already stuck. Another shock wouldn’t find a boom here either.So this week’s Personal Consumption Expenditures report matters less as a number than as a test. An inflation bump due to energy and tariffs? The Fed can wait. Bleeding into services, wages and expectations? Different problem.The economy is still standing. But the echo is loud – and the cost of misreading it cuts both ways.Is the Fed more afraid of the 70s, or of being the one who hiked into the slowdown?

⚠️ Flood Watch issued June 17 at 10:26AM CDT until June 17 at 9:00PM CDT by NWS Chicago IL
Today Jun 16
Showers And Thunderstorms
72° 59°

Showers And Thunderstorms

💨 15 to 25 mph 💧 100%

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

WATCH: Gov. Polis calls out Republicans in State of the State

WATCH: Gov. Polis calls out Republicans in State of the State

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Colorado Gov. Jared Polis delivered his last State of the State to a joint session of the Colorado General Assembly on Thursday. In his speech,...
Republican senators introduce bill to address childcare, immigration fraud

Republican senators introduce bill to address childcare, immigration fraud

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square U.S. senators, led by U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, have introduced a bill to amend federal law to address federally funded childcare provider fraud. The...
More than $1 billion spent on noncitizen hospital costs in fiscal 2025

More than $1 billion spent on noncitizen hospital costs in fiscal 2025

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Taxpayer-funded medical costs for noncitizens at Texas hospitals totaled more than $1 billion last year, according to newly released state data. The data spans ten...

IL Senate GOP: Pritzker, not Trump, raised power bills

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Senate Republicans say Gov. J.B. Pritzker is wrong to blame President Donald Trump for high electric...
SC weighs whether Amazon must pay workers for mandatory COVID screenings

SC weighs whether Amazon must pay workers for mandatory COVID screenings

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Supreme Court is considering whether Amazon must compensate warehouse workers for time spent waiting...
Federal judge allows New York wind project to proceed

Federal judge allows New York wind project to proceed

By Chris WadeThe Center Square A federal judge has given a green light for construction to resume on New York's largest offshore wind project that was abruptly shut down by...
Goodlander faces federal probe over ‘illegal orders’ video

Goodlander faces federal probe over ‘illegal orders’ video

By Chris WadeThe Center Square Democratic New Hampshire Rep. Maggie Goodlander says she is being investigated by federal prosecutors for participating in a video message urging service members to refuse...
Pennsylvania lawmakers criticize violent ICE encounters

Pennsylvania lawmakers criticize violent ICE encounters

By Christina LengyelThe Center Square With ongoing protests across the commonwealth over the actions of the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, 18 Pennsylvania legislators have...
Trump says 'Great Healthcare Plan' will save $36 billion

Trump says ‘Great Healthcare Plan’ will save $36 billion

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square President Donald Trump called on Congress to enact his "Great Healthcare Plan," in a bid to lower drug prices and insurance premiums. The plan proposes...
Trump threatens invoking Insurrection Act after Venezuelan national shot

Trump threatens invoking Insurrection Act after Venezuelan national shot

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square President Donald Trump said on Thursday he would invoke the Insurrection Act in Minnesota if attacks on Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers continue. "If the...
Maine officials brace for ICE operations

Maine officials brace for ICE operations

By Chris WadeThe Center Square Maine leaders are bracing for a possible influx of ICE agents into the state's two largest cities as part of the Trump administration's mass deportation...
WATCH: Tax increase talk at Statehouse; Bost’s election lawsuit against Illinois wins standing

WATCH: Tax increase talk at Statehouse; Bost’s election lawsuit against Illinois wins standing

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square's Greg Bishop discusses the status of...
Medical group ‘optimistic’ Supreme Court will affirm biological sex in sports

Medical group ‘optimistic’ Supreme Court will affirm biological sex in sports

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Following oral arguments in the U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday on whether males should participate in female sports, a medical group is “optimistic” that biological sex...
Despite promises, MN Dems kept some of their fraud-linked Somali donations

Despite promises, MN Dems kept some of their fraud-linked Somali donations

By Jared StrongThe Center Square In an attempt to distance themselves from the Feeding Our Future fraud, Minnesota politicians vowed to return their tainted donations, but an investigation by The...
Illinois Quick Hits: Indiana governor 'working hard' to attract Bears

Illinois Quick Hits: Indiana governor ‘working hard’ to attract Bears

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Indiana Gov. Mike Braun says the Chicago Bears noticed that the Hoosier state is open for business....