Stagflation
Stagflation
Stagflation
In 1980, after years of double-digit inflation the Federal Reserve Board (Fed), under Paul
Volcker, prodded banks to raise interest rates to record levels of more than 20 percent to
induce a recession and break the inflation cycle. Subsequently the Fed pursued a
monetary policy designed to head off significant increases in inflation, but in 1994–1995,
seven Fed increases in short-term interest rates failed to moderate economic growth. This
led to speculation that in a global economy, domestic monetary policy may not be as
effective in controlling stagflation as previously thought.
This term was widely used in the 1970s to describe the co-existence of stagnant economic
growth and high inflation. If we revisit the wonder years of 1970s, when the economy
was over regulated, oil shocks had the ability to paralyze the nation and the central
bankers still thought there was a trade off between growth and inflation. In 1960s
economists Milton and Edmund Phelps challenged the idea of permanent trade off
between unemployment and inflation, the experience of the 1970s would seem to bear
them out as the inflation had reach double digits and the unemployment had reached 9%.
The world economy has had several good years, global growth has been strong, and the
divided between the developing countries and developed world has narrowed, with India
and China leading the way, even Africa has been doing well, with growth in excess of 5%
in 2007.
But the good times are ending. There have been worries for years about the global
imbalance; America’s ill- conceived war in Iraq helped fuel to quadrupling of oil price
since 2003. in the 1970s, oil shocks lead to inflation in some countries and to recession
elsewhere, as governments raised interest rates to combat rising prices and some
economies faced the worst of both worlds; stagflation.
The administration now is hoping, somehow, to forestall a wave foreclosure- thereby
passing the economy’s problems on to the next president, just as it is doing with Iraq
quagmire. Their chances of succeeding are slim. For America today, the real question is
only whether there will by be short, sharp down turn, or a more prolonged, but shallower,
slowdown. Moreover, America has been exporting its problems abroad, through the ever-
weaking dollar, for instance Europe; for instance, will find it increasingly difficult to
export and in the world economy that had rested on the foundations of a strong dollar the
consequent financial market instability will be costly for all. At the time, there has been a
massive global redistribution of income from oil importers to oil exporters- a
disproportionate number of which are undemocratic states and form workers everywhere
to the very rich. It is not clear whether workers everywhere will continue to accept
decline in their living standards in the name of an unbalanced globalization whose
promises seem ever more elusive.
Indeed, the flip side of ‘a world awash with liquidity’ is a world facing depressed
aggregate demand. There is one positive note in this dismal picture; the sources of global
growth today are more diverse than they were a decade ago. The real engines of global
growth in recent years have been developing countries. Nevertheless, slower growth – or
possibly a recession – in the world’s largest economy inevitably has global consequences.
There will be a global slowdown. If monetary authorities respond appropriately to
growing inflationary pressure – recognizing that much of it is imported, and not a result
of excess domestic demand – we may be able to manage our way through it. But if they
raise interest rates relentlessly to meet inflation targets, we should prepare for the worst:
another episode of stagflation. If the central banks go down this path, they will no doubt
eventually succeed in wringing inflation out of the system.
INFLATION
The rate of growth improved in the 1980s. From fiscal year 1980 to 1989, the economy
grew at an annual rate of 5.5 %, or 3.3% on a per capita basis. Industry grew at an annual
rate of 6.6% and agriculture at a rate of 3.6%. A high rate of investment was a major
factor in improved economic growth. Investment went about 19% of GDP in the early
1970s to nearly 25 % in the early 1980s. India, however, required a higher rate of
investment to attain comparable economic growth than did most other low income
developing countries. Private saving financed most of India’s investment, but by the mid
1980s further growth in private savings was difficult because they were already at quite a
high level. As a result, during the late 1980s India relied increasingly on borrowing from
foreign sources. This trend led to balance of payments crisis in 1990; in order to receive
new loans, the government had no choice but to agree to further measures of economic
liberalization. This commitment to economic reform was reaffirmed by the government
that came to power in June 1991.
The 1990s is widely described in general as a price stability era all over the globe. During
the early part of the decade developed and developing countries alike experienced a
distinct ebbing of inflation. India started having balance of payment problem since 1985,
and by the end of 1990, it found itself in serious economic trouble. The government was
close to default and its foreign exchange reserves had dried up to the point that India
faced high inflation and large government budget deficits. The Indian economy has been
registering a mammoth GDP growth post liberalization. The opening up of the Indian
economy after the 1990s increased India’s industrial output, which in turn raised the
inflation rate significantly. The growth rate of industrial output and employment created
an enormous pressure on the inflation rate and pushed it further. The RBI and the
Ministry of Finance, government of India is concerned about the present upswing of
inflation in India. The main cause of rise in the rate of inflation India is the pricing
disparity of agricultural products between the producer and consumer in the Indian
market. More ever, the sky rocketing of prices of food products, manufacturing products,
and essential commodities have also catapulted the inflation rate in India. Furthermore,
the unstable international crude oil prices have worsened the situation. The RBI has
assured the Indian business community and the general public about the harmless rise in
the CRR but apprehensions still amongst business circles in India. The RBI is devising
methods and financial models to arrest the rise in the rate of inflation in India. The RBI
had given top priority to price stability and economic growth sustenance in India, in its
recently drafted monetary policy. The RBI of India has rise the cash reserve ratio in a
continuous manner to arrest the rise in the rate of inflation India. India has to not only
ensure inflation stabilization but also sustain the present economic growth rate.