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?

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Former board member expressed concerns about indicted DeKalb superintendent

Former board member expressed concerns about indicted DeKalb superintendent

By Kim Jarrett | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A former DeKalb County School Board member told The Center Square in 2023 she had concerns about...
Trump administration begins axing positions of furloughed federal workers

Trump administration begins axing positions of furloughed federal workers

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The Office of Management and Budget will begin eliminating thousands of civilian positions across the federal government, fulfilling the Trump administration’s plan to use the...
Fiscal Fallout: Illinois has among highest-paid state employees

Fiscal Fallout: Illinois has among highest-paid state employees

By Jared Strong | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The average wages for Illinois state employees are among the highest in the nation and belie the...
Report: State reliance on federal funds up significantly since 1990s

Report: State reliance on federal funds up significantly since 1990s

By Tate MillerThe Center Square States rely on federal dollars more than they have in modern history, according to a new report, with one of the report’s authors saying such...
Southwest low on list of safest states; Northeast at the top

Southwest low on list of safest states; Northeast at the top

By Dave MasonThe Center Square The Northeast corner is the safest part of the U.S., according to a new WalletHub study. The Southwest? Not so much. Issues such as high...
Washington state attorney general agrees to protect seal of confession

Washington state attorney general agrees to protect seal of confession

By Tim ClouserThe Center Square The Washington State Attorney General's Office reported on Friday that it has reached an agreement with the Catholic Church over a new abuse reporting law....
Pacific Northwest journalists sound off on Antifa at President Trump’s roundtable

Pacific Northwest journalists sound off on Antifa at President Trump’s roundtable

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square Journalists from the Pacific Northwest took part in President Donald Trump’s Wednesday roundtable discussion on Antifa that included top cabinet officials and other independent members...
Nvidia will pay 100k visa fees, others unsure

Nvidia will pay 100k visa fees, others unsure

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said his company would pay $100,000 fees for H-1B visas imposed by the Trump administration. On Sept. 19, President Donald Trump...
'Shameful:' GOP leaders frustrated with Dems on tenth day of shutdown

‘Shameful:’ GOP leaders frustrated with Dems on tenth day of shutdown

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square U.S. senators have left town for the weekend and will not vote again on a federal funding bill until Tuesday, meaning the ongoing government shutdown...
Trump snubbed by Nobel Committee, praised by winner

Trump snubbed by Nobel Committee, praised by winner

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square After being credited for ending seven wars, President Donald Trump was snubbed for the Nobel Peace Prize. Trump, who accumulated several high-profile nominations for the...
Screenshot 2025-10-10 at 11.39.44 AM

Will County Committee Approves Preliminary $161.6M Tax Levy on Split Vote Amid Heated Debate Over Spending

Will County Finance Committee Meeting October 7, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Finance Committee on Tuesday narrowly approved a preliminary $161.6 million property tax levy for 2025, which projects...
Screenshot 2025-10-10 at 11.36.42 AM

Will County Eyes Major Overhaul to Consolidate Scattered Government Offices

Will County Capital Improvements & IT Committee Meeting October 7, 2025 Article Summary: Will County officials are formally debating a new facilities master plan to address aging buildings and dozens...
Trump threatens tariffs on China over 'hostile' rare earths policy

Trump threatens tariffs on China over ‘hostile’ rare earths policy

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump threatened a "massive increase" in tariffs on products from China after Beijing tightened export controls on rare earth minerals critical to advanced...
Illinois legislator urges school discipline to focus on behavior, not race

Illinois legislator urges school discipline to focus on behavior, not race

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – McLean County Unit 5 submits a new discipline plan under state law after racial disparities are...
WATCH: Trump appeals Guard TRO as DHS looks to ‘double down’ law enforcement in Chicago

WATCH: Trump appeals Guard TRO as DHS looks to ‘double down’ law enforcement in Chicago

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop reviews the latest...