What is stagflation, and should we be worrying about it? - CBS News
Soaring prices and slowing growth are alarming economists, who warn that we could see a replay of the turbulent 1970s.
www.cbsnews.comHere’s a concise update on the latest discussion about stagflation with a look back at the 1970s.
What it is: Stagflation combines high inflation with weak economic growth and unemployment, a troubling mix that plagued the US in the 1970s. This combination produced what many called the “misery index” during that era.[3][6]
Relevance today: Analysts cautioned that persistent inflation paired with slower growth could resemble the 1970s dynamics, though policy tools have evolved since then (e.g., more independent monetary policy, different inflation dynamics). Recent commentary emphasizes the risk of higher inflation constraining growth and limiting Fed policy options.[4][7]
Historical markers: The 1970s stagflation episode followed oil shocks, energy-price spikes, and supply-side constraints that raised production costs and consumer prices, with unemployment rising alongside inflation for several years. The response involved restrictive monetary policy later in the decade, contributing to recessions in the early 1980s before inflation cooled.[1][3]
Notable perspectives: Some articles discuss the possibility of stagflation returning under certain policy scenarios (tariffs, energy price shocks, or demand-supply imbalances) but opinions vary on how likely a repeat would be and how severe it might be given modern policy tools. Others note that current inflation pressures differ in composition and persistence compared with the 1970s.[2][7][4]
Illustration: If you want, I can generate a short chart comparing key indicators from the 1970s (inflation, unemployment, GDP growth) with recent data to visualize how today’s dynamics align or differ.
Would you like a quick, clean chart or a brief bullet-point timeline highlighting the 1970s stagflation milestones and the contemporary debates? I can also tailor the summary to a specific region (U.S. vs. global) or focus on policy responses.
Citations:
Soaring prices and slowing growth are alarming economists, who warn that we could see a replay of the turbulent 1970s.
www.cbsnews.comStagflation. It was the dreaded “S word” of the 1970s. For Americans of a certain age, it conjures memories of painfully long lines at gas stations and shuttered factories.
apnews.comSoaring prices and slowing growth are alarming economists, who warn that we could see a replay of the turbulent 1970s.
www.cbsnews.comEveryone's expecting a soft landing. But after the harmful monetary, fiscal, and trade policies of the past two decades, does a bout of stagflation really seem so farfetched?
www.ssga.comCompounding the damage from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Russian invasion of Ukraine has magnified the slowdown in the global economy, which is entering what could become a protracted period of feeble growth and elevated inflation, according to the World Bank’s latest Global Economic Prospects report. This raises the risk of stagflation, with potentially harmful consequences for middle- and low-income economies alike.
www.worldbank.orgRecently I opened the printed version of THE ATLANTIC and discovered a very interesting article by David Frum entitled, “That 70s Feeling: Trump’s tariffs could cause stagflation for the first time in decades. It may go on for a long, long time.”
www.wamc.org