During the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, Arab members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) imposed an embargo against the United States in retaliation for the U.S. decision to re-supply the Israeli military and to gain leverage in the post-war peace negotiations…The onset of the embargo contributed to an upward spiral in oil prices with global implications. The price of oil per barrel first doubled, then quadrupled, imposing skyrocketing costs on consumers and structural challenges to the stability of whole national economies. history,state.gov
It might happen again, but not because of an energy shortage. Friday’s report on the Commerce Department’s Personal Consumption Expenditure Index (PCE) raised alarms that inflation was on the rise, which is one of the two main components of stagflation. Inflation hasn’t been tamed, as it rose 2.5 percent, 2.8 percent without food and energy prices, per the BEA graph.
Stagflation last happened in the 1970s because of the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo that caused gas stations to run out of gas and consumer prices to soar. It ultimately resulted in a 14.8 percent CPI inflation rate in 1980. And it was more than a decade before inflation and interest rates dropped back to single digits, and we lived through three recessions.
This was also the beginning of the Second Gilded Age so well documented by political scientists Jacob Hacker and Paul Pierson in Winner-Take-All Politics: How Washington Made the Rich Richer—and Turned Its Back on the Middle Class that was initiated by President Reagan and supported by the Business Roundtable of Chief corporate Executives.
It began the huge transfer of wealth from wage earning Americans to the owners of capital with successive tax cuts and restrictions on labor organizing, as well as the massive deregulation of industries such as the airlines and telecommunications.
US Corporations took advantage of the globalization of technologies and began the massive move of factories overseas, along with the blue-collar jobs that had built middle America, to countries with cheaper wages and fewer environmental regulations.
The gutting of rust belt jobs in the Midwest resulted in the red state-blue state split we have today, with right to work laws in those states that restrict the right of unions to collect dues from their members, many with wages still stuck at the national $7.25 per hour minimum wage.
This is while economic growth, the other main element of stagflation, is slowing. Why? Consumers are not happy with the high prices and economic uncertainty caused by Trump’s tariffs and Elon Musk’s DOGE massive job cuts, so they aren’t spending as they did in the past, and consumers are the main driver of economic growth.
The loss of tens of thousands of federal jobs and depopulating the service sector industry, the fastest growing economic sector that depends on undocumented workers, will do the same.
This is reflected in falling consumer confidence. The University of Michigan’s final February survey said: “Consumer sentiment extended its early month decline, sliding nearly 10% from January. The decrease was unanimous across groups by age, income, and wealth. All five index components deteriorated this month, led by a 19% plunge in buying conditions for durables, in large part due to fears that tariff induced price increases are imminent.
All of these factors make a reduction in first quarter economic growth more likely. In fact, the Atlanta Fed’s estimate of first quarter growth declined further into negative territory.
The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the first quarter of 2025 is -2.8 percent on March 28, down from -1.8 percent on March 26. The alternative model forecast, which adjusts for imports and exports of gold as described here, is -0.5 percent.
Can we prevent a recurrence, in which we again have double digit inflation and slow to no growth? Trump would have to learn how to negotiate with congress rather than issue unlawful executive orders and take away Elon Musk’s chainsaw for that to happen.
Harlan Green © 2025
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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