http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-20738581.html
I've been trying to study the 1970s as best I can. Below is a very interesting article. I have extracted what I found to be the most interesting of the excerpts, a confession. I suspect we need to relearn that Arthur Burns learned, just as painfully as he did.
I've been trying to study the 1970s as best I can. Below is a very interesting article. I have extracted what I found to be the most interesting of the excerpts, a confession. I suspect we need to relearn that Arthur Burns learned, just as painfully as he did.
After leaving the Fed, Burns gave a speech in 1979 called "The Anguish of Central Banking." He said (Burns 1979, pp. 12, 13, and 21):
Once it was established that the key function of government was to solve problems and relieve hardships - not only for society at large but also for troubled industries, regions, occupations, or social groups - a great and growing body of problems and hardships became candidates for governmental solution . . . .Their [government programs] cumulative effect . . . was to impart a strong inflationary bias to the American economy . . . . The pursuit of costly social reforms often went hand in hand with the pursuit of full employment . . . . This weighting of the scales of government policy inevitably gave an inflationary twist to the economy, and so did the expanding role of government regulation. . . . My conclusion that it is illusory to expect central banks to put an end to the inflation that now afflicts the industrial economies does not mean that central banks are incapable of stabilizing actions; it simply means that their practical capacity for curbing an inflation that is driven by political forces is very limited.