economic outlook
A small word about inflation
A SMALL WORD ABOUT INFLATION
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There's a lot of political and economic talk making the
rounds these days about how we've "whipped" inflation.
Don't you believe it. According to International Reports,
Inc., 200 Park Ave., New York, N.Y. 10003, the current
annual rate of inflation in the United States is running at
6.2%.
This means that if you hide a dollar in the cookie jar
today ... and then dig it out just five years from
now ... that dollar will buy less than three-quarters
(only 72.4%) of what it can purchase right now. Or, to turn
it around the other way, you'll have to invest that dollar
in something which— after all taxesand
handling fees — will guarantee you 6.2%
interest (compounded annually) just to keep its purchasing
power from shrinking.
Inflation, in short, is a long way from being
"whipped", and it is a mark of extreme economic naivete (on
both his part and on ours) when a major U.S. presidential
candidate—Jimmy Carter—can say without
challenge that he intends to concentrate on jobs and "let
inflation take care of itself". Gerald Ford may bump his
head a lot (and we'd certainly never endorse him, or anyone
else, for President), but he at least has sense enough to
leave his administration's economic policy in the hands of
men (Burns, Simon, Greenspan) who understand that inflation
is, indeed, Economic Public Enemy Number One to any stable
society.
So what are we gonna do? If the guys already in office know
how to hold the line but can't ... and the guys
trying to get in office don't even know how to
hold the line ... what are we gonna do?