Robert Samuelson
Wednesday June 25, 2008
We may be looking at inflation again

WASHINGTON - Forget the housing collapse, the "credit crunch" and - in isolation - higher oil prices. The real economic menace may be resurgent inflation, which is the broad rise of most prices.

To understand why, some history helps.

The government's worst domestic blunder since World War II was the unleashing of high inflation: in 1960, annual inflation was 1.4 percent; by 1979, it was 13.3 percent.

This terrified Americans, who feared falling living standards. It also destabilized the economy, causing harsher recessions that culminated with 10.8 percent unemployment in 1982.

We don't want to go there again, and Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has been insisting that we won't. In a recent speech, he argued that the economy today is much different from the mid-1970s.

He's right. In 1974, inflation (as measured by the Consumer Price Index) was 12 percent. Unemployment in the parallel recession peaked at 9 percent in early 1975.

We're not close to that havoc.

Unfortunately, Bernanke's comforting analogy is misleading. The question is not whether it's 1975; it's whether it's 1966.

It was then that the inflationary psychology - which later led to so much grief - took hold.

Vietnam War spending and the Fed's easy money policies created an economic hothouse. Government officials and most academic economists underestimated the danger.

Inflation crept from negligible levels to 3.5 percent in 1966 and 6.2 percent in 1969.

There are eerie parallels now.

From 1997 to 2003, inflation averaged slightly more than 2 percent. Now it's 4 percent; some economists soon expect 5 percent.

Hmm.

To be sure, differences abound.

Then, we had a classic wage-price spiral. Strong consumer demand allowed businesses to raise prices, which spurred demands for higher wages that companies paid because they needed the workers and could recover the costs through higher prices.

In 1959, labor costs rose 4 percent; firms could offset most of that through efficiencies (aka "productivity"). By 1968, labor costs were up a less forgiving 8 percent.

By contrast, today there's not yet a wage-price spiral. Inflationary pressures seem to originate mostly in rising raw materials prices.

In 2002, oil was $25 a barrel; now it's $135. Corn was $2.30 a bushel; now it exceeds $7.

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