In the 1970s, major price increases, particularly for energy, created a strong fear of inflation -- increases in
the overall level of prices. As a result, government leaders came to concentrate more on controlling inflation than
on combating recession by limiting spending, resisting tax cuts, and reining in growth in the money supply. Ideas
about the best tools for stabilizing the economy changed substantially between the 1960s and the 1990s. In the
1960s, government had great faith in fiscal policy -- manipulation of government revenues to influence the economy.
Since spending and taxes are controlled by the president and the Congress, these elected officials played a leading
role in directing the economy. A period of high inflation, high unemployment, and huge government deficits weakened
confidence in fiscal policy as a tool for regulating the overall pace of economic activity. Instead, monetary
policy -- controlling the nation's money supply through such devices as interest rates -- assumed growing
prominence. Monetary policy is directed by the nation's central bank, known as the Federal Reserve Board, with
considerable independence from the president and the Congress.. Regulation and Control. The U.S. federal government regulates private enterprise in numerous ways. Regulation
falls into two general categories. Economic regulation seeks, either directly or indirectly, to control
prices. Traditionally, the government has sought to prevent monopolies such as electric utilities from
raising prices beyond the level that would ensure them reasonable profits. At times, the government has
extended economic control to other kinds of industries as well. In the years following the Great Depression,
it devised a complex system to stabilize prices for agricultural goods, which tend to fluctuate wildly in
response to rapidly changing supply and demand. A number of other 11
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