On Thursday, February 21, articles about the possibility of stagflation occurred
in both The New York Times (That
'70s Look: Stagflation) and The Wall Street Journal (Fears
of Stagflation Return As Price Increases Gain Pace). Are we about to be
subjected to a rerun of "That '70s Show"?
My bet is that if you rummaged through the archives of the financial media,
you would almost always find articles warning about the prospects for stagflation,
or whatever it was called prior to the 1970s, at this stage of the business
cycle - the early months of a recession. Chart 1 shows that inflation is a lagging economic
variable. That is, first, real GDP growth slows and later, inflation
peaks. Perhaps this is why the Conference Board has chosen to put inflation-related
variables - the CPI for services and unit labor costs for manufacturing - in
its index of Lagging Economic Indicators rather than its Leading or
Coincident Indicators.
Chart 1

But is the current stagflation of the same type as that of the 1970s? I think
not. As Chart 2 shows, in the mid and late 1970s and early 1980s, there were
sharp contractions in the global production of crude oil. Although there
was a small contraction in crude oil production in 2006 (the latest complete
annual data available), this contraction paled in comparison to that of earlier
periods. Crude oil, just like labor, is necessary for the production of goods
and services. When there is an abrupt and severe contraction in the production
of crude oil, there also is likely to be a contraction in real GDP. The price
of oil will rise sharply and, in the short run, this will cause the rate of
increase in general price indices, such as the CPI, to accelerate. Hence, stagflation.
To reiterate, currently, oil producers are not radically contracting output,
if at all, as they did in the mid 1970s, late 1970s and early 1980s.
Chart 2

Back in the 1970s and early 1980s, labor unions were much more powerful than
they are today. Cost-of-living wage increases were the rule. Now, they are
the exception. So, one might hypothesize that labor cost-push inflation was
more likely in the 1970s and early 1980s than is today. If so, unit labor cost
growth would have been much faster in the 1970s and early 1980s than today.
Chart 3 bears this out.
Chart 3

In sum, I believe that talk of the U.S. economy entering a 1970s-type stagflation
now is premature. Rather, this looks like a regular run-of-the-mill end-of-cycle
type of stagflation. Now, if the dollar were to go into a steep descent, it
is possible that oil producers would sharply cut back their output in order
to raise the dollar price of oil in order to compensate for the declining
purchasing power of a barrel of oil due to dollar depreciation. But we are
not there yet.