I would submit that the US inflation issues of the 1970s and going into the early 80s was caused more by other forces outside of monetary policy.
The fact that we saw an oil embargo when the US was totally dependent upon OPEC caused a rippling effect through the economy. This caused the price of everything to go up since oil was at the core of most all economic activity in some way.
Also, the idea of hyperinflation is any currency outside some small nation is impossible. Technology is simply too much a part of the global economy, and it is growing.
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One other event in the early 1970s contributed to the economic woes which accompanied the OPEC oil embargoes: the abandonment of the gold standard by the United States (closing the "gold window"). Prices increased at a small steady rate before then, but after USD went pure fiat it was off to the races for prices. It took until the mid-1980s for prices to settle down.
While there is no gold to abandon this time around, pure mathematics will bring grossly indebted economies to their knees. It can't be a good for a nation to have its national debt exceed 100% of its CGP and a significant portion of its annual budget assigned just to pay interest on the national debt.
Since USD is the world reserve currency, the United States will be brought to its knees last. The suspense comes in seeing if it chooses to undergo a controlled glide or a spectacular crash-and-burn. With the current crop of elites we have, I expect the spectacular crash-and-burn.
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