Briefing | Turning a corner

Could America’s economy escape recession?

The route to a soft landing is narrow

A car driven by Uncle Sam swerves to avoid rocks in a road
Image: Pete Ryan
|Washington, DC

As covid-19 spread throughout the world three years ago, many pored over the history of a previous pandemic, the Spanish flu of 1918-19, for clues about how the disaster would unfold. Now that the plague has abated, history may also provide a few lessons for the aftermath. As the first world war and the Spanish flu receded, interest rates were low and government spending high. Inflation surged. In order to bring prices back under control, America’s central bankers cranked rates up, triggering a severe recession. The Federal Reserve described its actions in 1921 as “painful but…unavoidable” following “an unprecedented orgy of extravagance”.

This article appeared in the Briefing section of the print edition under the headline “Turning a corner”

From the July 22nd 2023 edition

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