Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American economist Paul A. Volcker.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Paul Adolph Volcker Jr. was an American economist who served as the 12th Chair of the Federal Reserve from 1979 to 1987. During his tenure as chairman, Volcker was widely credited with having ended the high levels of inflation seen in the United States throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. He previously served as the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from 1975 to 1979.
Double-digit inflation is a terrible thing - and it got up to 14 or 15 percent on a monthly basis for a while, shortly after I became chairman of the Fed.
The speed of communication, the speed of information transfer, the cheapness of communication, the ease of moving things around the world are a difference in kind as well as degree.
I am suspicious of the idea of a new paradigm, to use that word, an entirely new structure of the economy.
By the time I became chairman and there was more of a feeling of urgency, there was a willingness to accept more forceful measures to try to deal with the inflation.
It was the biggest inflation and the most sustained inflation that the United States had ever had.
Well, by the standards of a lot of countries, by Latin American standards, it wasn't so bad.
When people begin anticipating inflation, it doesn't do you any good anymore, because any benefit of inflation comes from the fact that you do better than you thought you were going to do.
You could not buy a house in those days without just assuming that the house was not only a place to live, but it was a good investment, because it was going to keep up with inflation or get ahead of inflation, and it was just - that was America.
What's the subject of life - to get rich? All of those fellows out there getting rich could be dancing around the real subject of life.
Less emphasis on inventories, I think, may tend to dampen business cycles, because business cycles are typically in the grasp of inventory cycles and heavy industry cycles.