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Powell says ‘stagflation’ is a 1970s term, not what we face today

By Thomson Reuters Mar 18, 2026 | 2:36 PM

WASHINGTON, March 18 (Reuters) – Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday that ​the current U.S. ‌economic situation, even with the Iran war-induced spike in energy prices was far removed from ‌the “stagflation” ​of the 1970s, ⁠with current inflation ⁠only one percentage point above target and low unemployment.

I would reserve the term ​stagflation for, you know, a much more serious ⁠set of ⁠circumstances. That is not ​the situation we’re in,” Powell ​told a news conference after ‌the Fed held policy rates steady.

“What we have is some tension between ⁠the goals and we’re trying to manage our way through it,” ⁠Powell ‌added. “It’s a very difficult ⁠situation, but it’s ​nothing ‌like what they faced ​in the ⁠1970s and I reserve stagflation for that — the word — for that period. Maybe that’s just me.”

(Reporting by ​David Lawder)