Quote from gnome:
It took Paul Volker to slam on the brakes... jacked rates up to 15% or so, drained liquidity, and the inflation subsided.
Quote from Stosh:
Does anyone here know enough economic history to inform me as to what most economists think caused the inflationary period of the '70s? I'm trying to find some correlation to today's situation. I would guess, but don't know, that it was mostly the result of spending on Viet Nam war, LBJ's Great Society programs, and printing of money to fund them.
Quote from Stosh:
Does anyone here know enough economic history to inform me as to what most economists think caused the inflationary period of the '70s? I'm trying to find some correlation to today's situation. I would guess, but don't know, that it was mostly the result of spending on Viet Nam war, LBJ's Great Society programs, and printing of money to fund them.
Quote from Dr. Zhivodka:
I remember having profs that actually knew stuff from before they were profs.
Quote from southamerica:
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February 19, 2007
SouthAmerica: Reply to Hydroblunt
In the mid 1970âs when I was in college I did read a very interesting book that gave me a detailed analysis of the roots of the economic mess that the US found itself in the 1970âs â the name of the book was âInflationâ by Michael Harrington. He also wrote a number of other books, but the book that made him famous was âThe Other American.â
I was an undergraduate economics student at that time and Michael Harringtonâs book made a lot of sense to me. The root of the problem of the inflation of the 1970âs was in the massive US defense spending going back to the mid 1960âs because of the Vietnam War.
Massive defense spending generates inflation in future years.
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=87312&perpage=6&pagenumber=4
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