by Thomas Catenacci
While rapidly increasing consumer prices have triggered fears that the U.S. economy may enter into a period of stagflation, it is unlikely to hit 1970s levels, an economic report concluded.
The current condition of the U.S. economy has created some fear that prices may precipitously and uncontrollably rise while unemployment stays elevated, according to the report authored by Heritage Foundation Center for Data Analysis Director Norbert Michel. But an analysis of inflation and employment data suggests Americans don’t need to overreact.
“The rise in the consumer price index and weak job growth, has stoked fears of 1970s style stagflation, an economy that exhibits both high unemployment and inflation,” Michael wrote in the report. “It certainly appears that the risk of higher inflation has now arrived, and the fact that the economy has not yet fully recovered from the pandemic adds to the apprehension.”
“Though the situation can change quickly, the current data is not indicative of a return to the 1970s era of high inflation,” Michel said.
Multiple inflation measurements released over the last month have shown worrying signs for the ongoing economic recovery. An underwhelming April jobs report added to worries of a stagnating recovery.
The Consumer Price Index showed prices increased more between May 2020 and April than any other 12-month period since 2008. In that same period, the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, took its biggest 12-month leap since 1992.
Inflation measures, however, would need to tick up higher and for longer for the economy to get anywhere near the 1970s inflation crisis, according to Michel. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, inflation spiked nearly 15%, well above the current level, as a result of energy prices, unemployment and a large money supply.
Michel recommended Congress reign in its spending habits to prevent potential out-of-control inflation. Economists like former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers have recently warned that large government spending packages could trigger once-in-a-generation inflationary pressures.
“Congress and [President Joe Biden’s administration] should reduce regulations that make consumer products more expensive, fix the federal government’s structural spending problems, and ensure that the Federal Reserve normalizes monetary policy,” Michel wrote.
“Elected officials must curb rising U.S. debt and the growth in entitlement spending,” he said. “The risk of a fiscal crisis and higher inflation are heightened by persistently increasing debt and deficits.”
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Thomas Catenacci is a reporter at Daily Caller News Foundation.