Los Angeles Times

Trump is pressuring the Fed to keep interest rates low. Nixon actually did it — and damaged the economy

WASHINGTON - The Federal Reserve was raising interest rates and the president wasn't happy about it.

No, it wasn't President Donald Trump, who took the unusual step of publicly criticizing the independent central bank last week. It was another volatile president - Richard Nixon - and the experience presents a cautionary tale.

The U.S. had just emerged from a nearly yearlong recession in 1971 after the independent central bank slashed its key short-term interest rate by more than half.

Fed Chairman Arthur Burns was worried that continuing the low rates and expansionary monetary policy with the economy growing again could lead to what he called "awful problems" down the line.

Nixon was more worried about his re-election in 1972.

"We've really got to think of goosing it ... late summer and fall of this year and next year," Nixon told Burns on March 19, 1971, according to White House audio recordings released years later.

It was one of several

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times4 min readInternational Relations
In Talks With Putin Amid Ukraine War, Xi Calls Russia-China Ties A 'Strong Driving Force'
Russian President Vladimir Putin and China's Xi Jinping put their countries' partnership on red-carpet display in Beijing on Thursday, aiming to project a unified alternative to the West as each faces pressure amid Moscow's war on Ukraine. President
Los Angeles Times10 min read
Ben Gibbard On That Glow-up Of A Haircut And His Love-hate Relationship With LA
LOS ANGELES — Twenty-one years ago, Ben Gibbard's life changed twice in the span of eight months. In February 2003, the frontman of Seattle's Death Cab for Cutie released "Give Up," the first (and only) album by his electro-pop side project the Posta
Los Angeles Times3 min read
Robin Abcarian: 'Diaper Don'? Trump's Supporters Turn The Tables On His Puerile Critics
The political ascendance and staying power of Donald Trump have forced this country to confront so many existential questions: Can our democracy survive another Trump administration? Can an American president really and truly be above the law? And:

Related