Stagflation

Economic Factors High Relevance

A rare and challenging economic condition characterized by the simultaneous occurrence of stagnant economic growth (or recession), high inflation, and high unemployment. Stagflation contradicts the traditional Phillips Curve relationship, which suggests inflation and unemployment move in opposite directions. This condition creates a policy dilemma because measures to reduce inflation (tightening monetary policy) typically worsen unemployment, while measures to stimulate growth (loosening policy) worsen inflation.

Example

The 1970s oil crisis produced classic stagflation in the United States: GDP growth stalled near 0% (stagnation), inflation reached double digits peaking above 13% (1979-1980), and unemployment climbed above 7%. The Federal Reserve faced an impossible choice: lowering interest rates to fight unemployment would fuel inflation, while raising rates to fight inflation would deepen the recession.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse stagflation with deflation or assume that recessions always bring low inflation. In reality, stagflation is the worst of both worlds: economic contraction WITH rising prices. Another common error is thinking stagflation is normal during recessions, when it is actually a rare economic anomaly that contradicts standard economic theory.

How This Is Tested

  • Identifying stagflation from economic indicators showing simultaneous stagnation, high inflation, and high unemployment
  • Understanding why stagflation creates a policy dilemma for central banks and governments
  • Recognizing appropriate portfolio strategies during stagflationary periods
  • Distinguishing stagflation from normal recession (low growth + low inflation) or typical expansion (growth + moderate inflation)
  • Analyzing the impact of stagflation on different asset classes: stocks suffer from weak earnings growth, bonds suffer from inflation and rising rates

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Michael, a 52-year-old investor, is concerned about economic reports indicating stagflation: GDP growth has turned negative, inflation is accelerating to 8% annually, and unemployment is rising. His portfolio is currently 70% large-cap stocks and 30% long-term Treasury bonds. Which of the following strategies would be most appropriate to address the stagflation environment?

Question 2

Stagflation is best defined as the simultaneous occurrence of which three economic conditions?

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Question 3

An economy exhibits the following characteristics: GDP growth is -0.5%, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increased by 9.2% over the past year, and the unemployment rate rose from 4.1% to 7.8%. Which economic condition is the economy experiencing?

Question 4

All of the following statements about stagflation are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

During a period of stagflation with 8% inflation, -1% GDP growth, and 8% unemployment, which of the following statements about asset class performance are accurate?

1. Long-term bonds suffer from both inflation eroding real returns and potential rate increases
2. Growth stocks typically outperform value stocks due to economic contraction
3. Cash and money market investments lose purchasing power despite rising yields
4. Commodities often provide some inflation protection during stagflationary periods

💡 Memory Aid

Think "Stag = Stuck + Inflation": The economy is STUCK (stagnant growth, rising unemployment) but prices keep RISING (inflation). Imagine a stuck car with the gas pedal floored: The engine roars (inflation) but you go nowhere (stagnation). Policy dilemma: Hit the brakes (raise rates) and you stall completely, keep accelerating and you overheat.

Related Concepts

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Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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