THE IRAN WAR DOESN'T HAVE TO BE A RERUN OF 'THAT '70S SHOW'
The following information was released by the
Are we headed for stagflation and recession? The parallels with the 1970s are ominous: Inflation surges and then retreats but gets stuck a bit too high. Trouble brews in
,
In fact, energy prices turn into recessions only if bad policies compound their effects. Price controls, credit controls, windfall profits taxes, export controls, the 55-mph speed limit, corn ethanol, cardigan sweaters, malaise, and a slow-to-react
The fundamentals are also better. The
,
Rising energy prices turn into recessions only if bad government policies compound their effects.
,
An oil price rise is like a tariff. As we have seen, tariffs, while damaging to overall growth, need not cause a recession.
The most important questions are when the
Oil futures markets offer a glimpse of where things might be headed.
Governments will be tempted by ham-handed policy responses.
With "affordability" and gasoline prices in the news, the
Higher gasoline prices need not mean inflation. But governments will produce inflation if they hand out money so people can pay higher prices. Price controls mean gas lines, which increase economic damage. The most productive users who can't substitute away then can't get the energy they need, and suppliers see no incentive to help. Windfall profits taxes in bad times dampen the incentive to invest in spare capacity in good times. The first principle of economics is: Don't transfer income by distorting prices. The first principle of politics is the opposite.
High energy prices do slow the economy. But a slowdown turns into a recession only when something financial goes wrong. The aftermath of an energy price spike depends a lot on how central banks respond. If the Fed reacts slowly, along with harmful economic policies, stagflation could again break out quickly, and then recession could follow when the Fed reacts to inflation.
The central bank will be tempted to react to supply-induced softening with demand stimulus. It will be tempted to "look through," i.e., ignore, the transitory inflation of an oil-price shock as it looked through Covid-era inflation, until inflation reached 8%. Fed officials planned to look through tariffs as well.
But, as in 1979, people who saw substantial inflation may be quick to expect more inflation, and then the Fed will have to react strongly, as it did in 1980. I also fear that the Fed may be paralyzed during its change of leadership or may try to avoid moving interest rates by relying on quantitative tightening or credit restrictions. All that will cause needless financial turmoil.
What should government do about rising energy prices? Nothing. Or, more concretely, get out of the way, ease restrictions, and let the market work its magic of sending energy to the most economically important uses while encouraging others to save, substitute or provide new energy. Keep inflation under control, and don't induce financial problems.



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