Here’s a concise update on the topic.
- What it is: Stagflation refers to a situation with persistent inflation combined with stagnating or shrinking economic growth and high unemployment, a term most associated with the 1970s in many economies.[1]
- Key drivers in the 1970s: Oil price shocks (notably 1973 and 1979), supply constraints, and energy shortages helped push prices up while growth slowed, creating the classic stagflation mix.[1]
- Historical milestones: The period saw inflation peak in the high single to mid-teens in the U.S. around 1979–1980, with unemployment also rising, producing a high misery index during that era.[2][4]
- Policy response then: Early 1970s wage-price controls and later tight monetary policy in the early 1980s helped restore inflation control, but at the cost of recession and higher unemployment in the near term.[3]
- Relevance to today: Analysts and policymakers discuss the risk of stagflation today when inflation remains elevated and growth slows, though conditions differ (monetary policy, global supply dynamics, and energy markets have evolved since the 1970s).[7][8]
Illustration example
- If inflation runs around 8–10% while GDP growth slips below trend and unemployment ticks up, that combination would resemble classic stagflation dynamics reminiscent of the 1970s, though the exact drivers differ today.
If you’d like, I can pull a short, cited timeline of the 1970s stagflation and a brief compare/contrast with current conditions, or summarize how policymakers addressed it then and what lessons might apply now.
Sources
In his latest piece on economic history, Denny Center Student Fellow Ian Stubbs (L'24) considers the 1970s stagflation crisis and it's implications for modern economic policy.
www.law.georgetown.eduSoaring prices and slowing growth are alarming economists, who warn that we could see a replay of the turbulent 1970s.
www.cbsnews.comSoaring prices and slowing growth are alarming economists, who warn that we could see a replay of the turbulent 1970s.
www.cbsnews.comRecently 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.orgWhy persistent inflation and slowing economic growth may not be as bad as they seem. Learn more here.
www.fidelity.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.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.
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