The View | Fed should raise rates before next slump hits
With jobless claims at lowest since 1973 and inflation tame, Fed must tighten sooner rather than later before next downturn

The last time unemployment claims were this low in the United States, in 1973, the Federal Reserve chairman, Arthur Burns, was the last one to lose control of inflation.
In Burns' defence, he faced outrageous political pressure from president Richard Nixon, not to mention the inflation and economic nightmare of the Arab oil embargo, but still it would be hard to blame Janet Yellen for feeling a bit of a chill at the back of her neck.

Jobless claims fell by 26,000 last week to 255,000, the lowest in 411/2 years. The less volatile four-week moving average fell 4,000 to 278,500 and is just 12,000 above the 15-year low recorded in May.
The Conference Board also said its Leading Economic Index rose 0.6 per cent last month, building on May's 0.8 per cent rise, helped in part by strength in the housing market.
Add to that strong growth in the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow real-time indicator, which is forecasting real economic growth in the second quarter of 2.4 per cent.
