Historian Charles Maier pointed out that the 1970s represented one of three systemic crises of the 20th century. It was a "crisis", as distinct from isolated economic or political turmoil, because in a crisis "all institutions seem to disappoint at the same time--there is a sense of profound interconnection." "Societies and regimes appear caught in vicious circles: policy responses produce only more disorder, less justice, and more stagnation." Plus ça change.
1 Bloomberg, March 2023.
2 Ben Bernanke’s history of monetary policy
3 September 2023. One hundred inflation shocks. Seven stylised facts. IMF, WP 23 1903.
4 Timothy Garton Ash from his book The Magic Lantern: Europe in the Twentieth Century published in 1998.
5 Lyons itemises those problems: “deindustrialization, rural decay, over-financialization, out of control asset prices, and the emergence of a self-perpetuating rentier elite; powerful tech monopolies able to crush any upstart competitors operating effectively beyond the scope of government; immense economic inequality, chronic unemployment, addiction, homelessness, and crime; cultural chaos, historical nihilism, family breakdown, and plunging fertility rates; societal despair, spiritual malaise, social isolation, and skyrocketing rates of mental health issues; a loss of national unity and purpose in the face of decadence and barely concealed self-loathing; vast internal divisions, racial tensions, riots, political violence, and a country that increasingly seems close to coming apart.”
6 He pointed to three specific failures: the Soviet Union had failed to institute a functioning price system while simultaneously protecting party control. It could not satisfy consumer demands while simultaneously maintaining heavy defense budgets. It could no longer maintain a closed system but had to rely on imports from the nonsocialist world furnished on credit.