Why Trump’s Rate Cut Push Mirrors Nixon’s Inflationary Mistake

As Donald Trump demands immediate Fed rate cuts, a growing chorus of economists warns the U.S. may be repeating one of the most catastrophic monetary policy errors in history – Nixon’s politically-driven easing that unleashed 1970s stagflation.

The Parallels:

Metric19722025
Core Inflation3.4%4.2%
Wage Growth6.1%5.3%
Oil Prices+88% YoY+34% YoY
Fed Political PressureNixon tapes show threatsTrump public attacks

The Risks:

  1. Inflation Anchoring: UMich survey shows 5-year expectations rising to 3.1%
  2. Dollar Crisis: Real yields turning negative could spark capital flight
  3. Credibility Loss: Fed’s “data-dependent” mantra undermined

Sectoral Impacts:

  • Housing: 8% mortgages have frozen $4T in home equity
  • Autos: 22% of buyers now priced out of market
  • Small Biz: 53% report difficulty servicing floating-rate debt

The Fed’s Dilemma:
“Cutting now would be malpractice,” argues former NY Fed President Bill Dudley, noting:
✓ Shelter inflation still running at 6.1% annually
✓ Services PMI shows continued price pressures
✓ M2 money supply growing again after 18-month contraction

Market Realities:

  • Bonds: 2-year yield curve inverts further (-48bps)
  • Gold: Hits $2,400/oz as hedge against policy mistake
  • Cryptos: Bitcoin surges 12% on currency debasement fears

Historical Lesson:
The 1972 rate cuts led to:
→ 1973 oil embargo inflation spike
→ 1979 Volcker shock requiring 20% rates
→ 10-year productivity slump