The Iran war’s energy price impact has stirred comparisons to the oil shocks of the 1970s, as the Bank of England voted unanimously to hold rates at 3.75% on Thursday and warned that the conflict could push UK inflation above 3% and require rate hikes. The monetary policy committee described the war as a significant new shock driven by geopolitical disruption to global energy supply — a transmission mechanism that echoes the supply disruptions of half a century ago that triggered some of the most difficult economic periods in modern history. Officials warned that the inflationary consequences could persist throughout 2026.
The 1970s comparison has limits, as the current shock is so far less severe than the oil price rises of that decade, which saw crude prices quadruple in 1973 and double again in 1979. However, the structural similarity — a conflict or political decision in the Middle East disrupting oil supply and transmitting inflation globally — makes the historical reference instructive. The key lesson from the 1970s is that allowing supply-driven inflation to become entrenched through insufficient monetary response leads to a much more costly eventual adjustment.
Governor Andrew Bailey was determined not to repeat that mistake. He said the Bank would act to prevent the energy price shock from becoming embedded in inflation expectations, even if the most direct solution lay outside its control. His implicit reference to the lessons of history reflected an awareness that the 1970s comparison, while imperfect, carried important warnings for contemporary monetary policy.
Financial markets moved to price in rate hikes in June and later in the year. UK gilt yields rose, the FTSE 100 fell, and the pound strengthened against the dollar as traders made their bets. Analysts noted that the 1970s comparison, while historically instructive, should not be taken to imply that the current situation required the same dramatic monetary response that the shocks of that decade ultimately necessitated.
For UK households, the 1970s comparison is both historically illuminating and practically relevant. The stagflationary conditions of that decade — rising prices, weak growth, rising unemployment — represent a worst-case scenario that both the Bank and the government are determined to avoid. The early and measured response to the current shock is partly designed to prevent the conditions from developing in a way that would make the comparison increasingly apt.