During the fiscally conservative administration of President Dwight D. Eisenhower (1953-1961), for instance, the
Fed emphasized price stability and restriction of monetary growth, while under more liberal presidents in the
1960s, it stressed full employment and economic growth. During much of the 1970s, the Fed allowed rapid credit
expansion in keeping with the government's desire to combat unemployment. But with inflation increasingly ravaging
the economy, the central bank abruptly tightened monetary policy beginning in 1979. This policy successfully slowed
the growth of the money supply, but it helped trigger sharp recessions in 1980 and 1981-1982. The inflation rate
did come down, however, and by the middle of the decade the Fed was again able to pursue a cautiously expansionary
policy. Interest rates, however, stayed relatively high as the federal government had to borrow heavily to finance
its budget deficit. Rates slowly came down, too, as the deficit narrowed and ultimately disappeared in the 1990s.
The growing importance of monetary policy and the diminishing role played by fiscal policy in economic
stabilization efforts may reflect both political and economic realities. The experience of the 1960s, 1970s, and
1980s suggests that democratically elected governments may have more trouble using fiscal policy to fight inflation
than unemployment. Fighting inflation requires government to take unpopular actions like reducing spending or
raising taxes, while traditional fiscal policy solutions to fighting unemployment tend to be more popular since
they require increasing spending or cutting taxes. Political realities, in short, may favor a bigger role for
monetary policy during times of inflation. One other reason suggests why fiscal policy may be more suited to
fighting unemployment, while monetary policy may be more effective in fighting inflation. 96
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