The government's ever-rising need for funds swelled the budget deficit and led to greater government borrowing,
which in turn pushed up interest rates and increased costs for businesses and consumers even further. With energy
costs and interest rates high, business investment languished and unemployment rose to uncomfortable levels. In
desperation, President Jimmy Carter (1977-1981) tried to combat economic weakness and unemployment by increasing
government spending, and he established voluntary wage and price guidelines to control inflation. Both were largely
unsuccessful. A perhaps more successful but less dramatic attack on inflation involved the "deregulation" of
numerous industries, including airlines, trucking, and railroads. These industries had been tightly regulated, with
government controlling routes and fares. Support for deregulation continued beyond the Carter administration. In
the 1980s, the government relaxed controls on bank interest rates and long-distance telephone service, and in the
1990s it moved to ease regulation of local telephone service. But the most important element in the war against
inflation was the Federal Reserve Board, which clamped down hard on the money supply beginning in 1979. By refusing
to supply all the money an inflation-ravaged economy wanted, the Fed caused interest rates to rise. As a result,
consumer spending and 34
|