Is the Golden Age Of 2% Inflation Over?

From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

Is the 2 Percent Inflation Golden Age Over?

Despite the Fed’s best efforts thus far to raise rates and cool off inflation, I don’t expect relief any time soon.

With that in mind, let’s look into the past to see what  a longer period of inflation looks like.

The best place to start in the U.S. is to take a brief look at an extraordinarily long period of inflation that took place from the 1970s to the early 1980s. We don’t have to examine every detail, which would take hours, but this summary will suffice:

President Nixon abandoned the gold standard on August 15, 1971; this move devalued the dollar and drove up inflation. On the very same day, Nixon announced wage and price controls, which he hoped would tamp down the cost of living and create jobs. The latter move was done as the 1972 presidential election heated up and Nixon hoped to win over voters.

Instead, inflation crept up throughout 1973 and 1974, and by December 1974 it was in excess of 12%. Meanwhile, unemployment rose and exceeded 8% by the end of 1974.

In January 1980, inflation was just under 14%. The next month, inflation exceeded 14%, and it stayed there until July of 1980. Although it dropped by about one percent in July 1980, inflation stayed firmly in double-digit territory throughout 1980 and much of 1981.

It took an extremely dramatic move by then-Chairman Paul Volcker to raise rates high enough (nearly 20%) to get inflation to cool, an action that ultimately triggered a recession. Fortunately, Volcker’s efforts finally tamed inflation, and set the U.S. economy up for massive growth.

You can see the tail end of the historic result of this inflationary period on the chart below. Official inflation is reported on the red line, and the blue line represents how it was reported in the early 1980s.

But you can also see approximately when the Fed’s methodology for reporting “official” inflation changed (marked by where the two lines diverge):

Looking at both lines on the graph above in 2023, you might be thinking that the years-long trend of red-hot consumer price inflation (CPI) will begin easing back to normal in short order. It’s a reasonable assumption. There is a trend that’s pointing in the right direction.

And that’s where the next part of this story begins…

High inflation is always stickier than we hope

Unfortunately, there is still a long way to go before any substantial price relief will materialize, particularly for those getting by on fixed incomes:

That first strike, in retrospect, would seem timid: Just a quarter percentage point increase to tackle price surges which in just a few months would peak at their highest annual rate since late 1981. It wouldn’t be long before policymakers knew that initial step wouldn’t be enough.

Subsequent months saw much larger hikes, enough to raise the Fed’s benchmark borrowing rate by 4.5 percentage points to its highest level since 2007. So after a year of inflation fighting, how are things going? In short, OK, but not a whole lot more. [emphasis added]

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – the Fed started way too slowly, after wasting months trying to gaslight us into believing inflation would go away by itself.

That didn’t work.

When they finally, grudgingly accepted that they’d have to do something, they took a “baby steps” approach that seemed far more concerned with letting Wall Street down easy than with the price of food and fuel.

In the words of Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist for LPL Financial, “They have a ways to go, it took [the Federal Reserve] a long time to acknowledge that inflation was stickier than they initially assessed.”

When you start late and move slowly, it takes you a whole lot longer to reach your destination.

The problem is, the entire American economy is along for the ride.

Moving slowly is bad enough – but as long as it’s in the right direction, at least it’s progress.

Anti-inflation efforts shift gear – into reverse

Revisions often fly under the radar, underreported in mainstream media – especially when revisions turn good news into bad news.

Case in point: A couple of weeks ago CPI was revised upward for October, November, and December 2022. Powell’s “disinflation” was just a daydream, dispelled by accurate data.

That’s bad enough. But the journey to 2% inflation has taken another wrong turn…

The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index has been revised upwards too. PCE can be thought of like a “direct price hike” on goods and services:

…prices that people living in the United States, or those buying on their behalf, pay for goods and services. The PCE price index is known for capturing inflation (or deflation) across a wide range of consumer expenses and reflecting changes in consumer behavior.

What a mess.

Wolf Richter summarized just how big an issue this is:

…the PCE price index for January, released today by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, was a horror show on all counts.

Not only did all the relevant measures get a lot worse in January, but the prior three months, October through December, were revised higher – much like the CPI inflation readings a couple of weeks ago – showing substantially greater inflation momentum at the end of the year than originally shown. The whole thing throws a lot of cold water on the “disinflation” hoopla.

Now, what do we do in the face of a stubborn inflationary trend?

An awful lot of people are making ends meet by piling up debt:

Even with a big 1.8% decline in retail sales in December, revolving credit, primarily reflecting credit card debt, grew by another $7.2 billion that month, a 7.3% increase.

To put the numbers into perspective, the annual increase in 2019, prior to the pandemic, was 3.6%. It’s pretty clear that Americans are still heavily relying on credit cards to make ends meet.

Clearly, this isn’t a sign of a healthy economy. Americans are spending more on everything thanks to rampant price inflation that doesn’t appear to be waning, and they’re relying on credit cards to do it.

When prices go up faster than income, you either cut your costs or borrow money. Recently, Americans have mostly chosen the “borrow money” route – perhaps they actually believed all the “transitory” hand-waving? Maybe they’re hoping that prices will come down soon?

Never forget: hope is not a plan. Any time your financial future is resting on nothing but hope, you’re very likely to find yourself in trouble rather soon.

Before long, people will hit the limits on their credit cards. Then, they’ll be stuck paying both higher prices and credit card bills. That’s a tight spot to be in and, regardless of whether we experience a full-blown national credit crisis, millions of American families will struggle through their very own financial mess.

All thanks to the tax no one voted for, and everybody pays.

So let me ask: should we wait for the Fed to put us back on track, and hope they can get the job done soon? Or should we take matters into our own hands?

Taking control of your own financial future

While you’re saving for the future and planning for retirement, consider a wide variety of inflation-resistant investments to insulate your savings from the corrosive effects of inflation. We don’t know what prices will be like next month, let alone a decade or two down the road – so it’s comforting to know you can plan for future expenses in today’s dollars. Stubborn inflation is just one of many reasons that prudent families consider both physical gold and silver to be vital safe havens in times of high inflation.

We can’t count on the Fed to figure things out. Jerome Powell does not have my best interests in mind. Call me a cynic if you want, but I don’t have a lot of faith or hope in the Federal Reserve. They’ve mishandled the into two and a half epic financial crises since the turn of the century. That’s not exactly an enviable track record…

Is it smart to diversify your savings with assets the Fed can’t inflate away? Should we take control of our financial futures out of the hands of unelected bureaucrats? That’s a decision you must make for yourself. If you do want to reclaim some of your financial sovereignty with physical precious metals, Birch Gold is here to help.

With global tensions spiking, thousands of Americans are moving their IRA or 401(k) into an IRA backed by physical gold. Now, thanks to a little-known IRS Tax Law, you can too. Learn how with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals how physical precious metals can protect your savings, and how to open a Gold IRA. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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9 Comments
ken31
ken31
April 1, 2023 5:20 pm

The only place where the inflation was as low as 2% were in the official numbers.

Leah
Leah
  ken31
April 2, 2023 4:40 am

“Official”

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
April 1, 2023 5:39 pm

In Publix the other day. King crab legs $46.99/lb.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  lamont cranston
April 1, 2023 8:12 pm

Need an EBT card for them

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  lamont cranston
April 2, 2023 6:39 am

Perhaps, but you don’t need crab legs to live, do you?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  The Central Scrutinizer
April 2, 2023 9:26 am

Do you need bourbon to live? Sex? A car?A home ? No you can exist without them.

overthecliff
overthecliff
April 1, 2023 9:52 pm

We will have 2% inflation when the Fed and Government only create 2% more currency in a year. Don’t hold your breath waiting for that to happen. You could die waiting.

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
April 2, 2023 6:37 am

The last time we had inflation this noticeable, it took Ronald Reagan and Republicans to get us out of it. Was gonna say “fix it” but that wouldn’t be entirely accurate.

However, and to the point, we don’t HAVE any Republicans this time. We’ve got UniParty fag traitors traipsing around pretending at being responsible Republicans.

Sadly, our collective consciousness will not wake up to this in time to save us from it.

Hey. At least the survivors will all be in agreement in the gulags.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 2, 2023 7:53 am

These Birch articles drive me crazy because they have blinders on and only see the cost of currency i.e. debt as a driver of the economy. I do admit that’s a big part of what drives the economy but, they always leave out another huge driver of the economy: Energy Policy. It wasn’t the fed or fed policy that got us out of the 70’s and early 80’s terrible economy. It was Reagan’s energy policy that eventually got us out of stagflation. Trump got us out of Obama’s anemic economy by opening the energy valve wide open. Energy drives supply; supply drives prices and so goes the economic train. The NORD event should tell you everything you need to know to understand how true this is.