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Former Fed chairman Paul Volcker warns of a return to the 1970s "or worse..."

THE U.S. ELECTORAL SYSTEM was never designed to protect sound finance, writes William Rees Mogg, but it has become more dangerous as Federal governments and the Fed itself have become more skillful at manipulating the economy of the United States.

   The process of running before every gust of wind reached its limits under Alan Greenspan, who always chose to inflate rather than deflate a bubble. His successor, Ben Bernanke, is more cautious than Greenspan but has made no attempt to reverse the Greenspan policy.

  
There has not been a chairman of the Federal Reserve Board with sound monetary instincts since Paul Volcker left in 1987. It was Paul Volcker who brought the Dollar back from the brink of hyperinflation in the early 1980s. On May 14th this year, Volcker testified before Congress. His conclusions about today's inflationary outlook were stark.

  
Scattered around the monetary world, and particularly influential in Europe, there is a group of central bankers who admire Paul Volcker, as I do myself. They share his analysis of the present situation. The Volcker analysis is very similar to that of the European Central Bank, and to that of Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England.

  
Paul Volcker testified to Congress that the Fed ought now to tackle the threat of inflation more forcefully. He is particularly concerned about the danger of a return to the conditions of "stagflation" of the 1970s "or worse". The Bank of England also expects that the next two yeas will see the pressure of rising inflation combined with low rates of growth.

   In the last period of global stagflation, this unpleasant combination of economic trends resulted from the loose monetary conditions of the early 1970s – loose money that led the Gold Price to multiply more than 20 times over – as well as the oil shocks of the mid-decade.

  
Those who experienced the 1970s were taught a painful lesson about the negative effects of inflation. Buying Gold gave small comfort, albeit with some measure of financial protection, as the value of most other investments, savings and income collapsed together with the value of money.

   In standard monetary theory, some emphasis is given to the initial phases of inflation, during which an increasing money supply funds economic expansion and tends to cause booms, bubbles and speculation. Less attention is usually given to the second stage of inflation in which prices rise, interest rates are increased and economic growth rates, after an acceleration, begin to slow down.

  
There is an illusion that inflation is good for growth; that is true of the first stage only. Stagflation, in which rising prices are accompanied by reduced growth, comes as a second stage.

  
Paul Volcker warned Congress this week that he saw a "resemblance" between present monetary conditions today and those of the early 1970s, when the economy had an overall tendency towards rising prices, including big increases in energy and agricultural prices. He observed that "if we lose confidence in the ability and the willingness of the Fed to deal with inflationary presses and sustain confidence in the Dollar, we'll be in trouble."

On the same day here in London, the Bank of England published its latest quarterly forecasts and came to much the same conclusions. The Bank's inflation projections will not return to the 2.0% target figure until early 2010, which suggest that it will have no room for rate cuts until then.

  
Britain and the United States have different political cycles. The next Presidential election in the United States will come nearly two years earlier than the next British General Election; the latest date for a General Election will be June, 2010. The Bank of England's economic forecast suggests that there is little chance of interest rate cuts much before that time. The government's reluctant tax cut on the lowest income tax band will strengthen the Bank's hand in keeping interest rates at their present level.

  
Mervyn King observed that "the consequences of price increases would be a squeeze on real take home pay which will slow consumer spending and output growth, perhaps sharply."

  
There exists what might be termed the Volcker consensus that inflation has returned as the real threat to world economic conditions. This consensus includes Paul Volcker himself, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank. It does not include Ben Bernanke, the Fed or the current President of the United States. After November we may find out whether it includes the next President of the United States.

Leading political editor William Rees-Mogg (1928-2012) was former editor-in-chief for The Times of London and an independent peer in the House of Lords in Westminster.

Credited with accurately forecasting glasnost and the fall of the Berlin Wall, as well as the 1987 financial crash, Lord Rees-Mogg wrote political commentary in The Times of London each week until his death.

See the full archive of William Rees-Mogg articles.

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