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

Lincoln Way West Warriors Baseball

Lincoln-Way West Offense Roars in 12-0 Shutout Over Lincoln-Way Central

The Lincoln-Way West varsity baseball team delivered a dominant performance on Wednesday, cruising to a 12-0 conference victory over Lincoln-Way Central. The Warriors’ offense wasted no time, putting up six...
Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 2.00.13 PM

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education for April 29, 2026

Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education Meeting | April 29, 2026 The Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education convened for a Special Meeting on April 29, 2026, to...
Canadian border crimes: Multi-million grandparent, crypto scam; human smuggling

Canadian border crimes: Multi-million grandparent, crypto scam; human smuggling

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Northern border crimes continue to be prosecuted against Canadian citizens for a range of multi-million-dollar scams targeting Americans nationwide. The U.S. investigations are being led...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Access Will County Dial-A-Ride Reports Massive Growth After Consolidating Paratransit Services

Will County Board Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting | May 5, 2026 Article SummaryThe Access Will County Dial-a-Ride program has seen explosive growth in ridership following a major consolidation...
Trade, Taiwan top priorities for Trump, Xi as two leaders wrap first meeting

Trade, Taiwan top priorities for Trump, Xi as two leaders wrap first meeting

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square President Donald Trump’s first visit to China in nearly 10 years has been met with pomp and circumstance as Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping...
Critics question unions after $1B in political spending

Critics question unions after $1B in political spending

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square Following a report by Defending Education revealing that the nation’s largest teachers unions spent more than $1 billion on political activities, education experts are questioning...
Trade court to rule on tariff stay by next week

Trade court to rule on tariff stay by next week

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Two small businesses that won a ruling against President Donald Trump's 10% tariff must continue paying it while courts decide whether to pause the decision...
Johnson defends Trump ballroom as 'a donation to the country'

Johnson defends Trump ballroom as ‘a donation to the country’

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Despite public condemnation from Democrats, House Republicans are confident that the $1 billion earmark for security upgrades to President Donald Trump’s ballroom will remain in...
Vance cuts $1.3 billion in California Medicaid, pauses hospice care

Vance cuts $1.3 billion in California Medicaid, pauses hospice care

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The Trump administration will defer $1.3 billion in Medicaid funds to California, due to concerns over fraud, Vice President JD Vance said Wednesday. Vance, alongside...
Groups urge House leaders to reject E15 expansion, calling it a hidden tax

Groups urge House leaders to reject E15 expansion, calling it a hidden tax

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square A coalition of conservative and free-market groups urged Congress to reject a bill that would permanently allow year-round sales of E15 gasoline nationwide. The coalition...
Lincoln Way West Warriors Softball

Lincoln-Way West Edges Bradley-Bourbonnais in 5-4 Conference Thriller

The Lincoln-Way West varsity softball team secured a hard-fought 5-4 victory over Bradley-Bourbonnais on Tuesday, rallying late to claim a narrow home conference win. The game was a competitive back-and-forth...
Illinois Quick Hits: Home insurance regulations approved by Illinois Senate

Illinois Quick Hits: Home insurance regulations approved by Illinois Senate

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A bill to regulate homeowners insurance rates will be up for consideration in the Illinois House after...
Senate confirms Warsh on narrow partisan lines

Senate confirms Warsh on narrow partisan lines

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square The U.S. Senate, in a 54-45 vote, confirmed Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump's pick to lead the Federal Reserve on Wednesday. The Senate voted closely...
Illinois Senate passes bill to regulate auto insurance rates

Illinois Senate passes bill to regulate auto insurance rates

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Illinois Senate has approved legislation to regulate auto insurance rates, but a former Illinois Department of...
Exclusive: GOP defends report, points to Walz administration failures on fraud

Exclusive: GOP defends report, points to Walz administration failures on fraud

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square The Republican-led Minnesota House fraud prevention and state oversight committee adopted its majority report on Wednesday, concluding a two-year review of alleged fraud across multiple...