An early use of the concept was in 1868. The term "wage–price spiral" appeared in a 1937
New York Times article about the
Little Steel strike. In the 1970s, US President Richard Nixon attempted to break what he saw as a "spiral" of prices and costs, by imposing a price freeze, with little effect. Some sources distinguish between wage–price spirals and price–wage spirals.
Olivier Blanchard argues that the concept declined with the rise of
rational expectations theory. Blanchard attempts to rehabilitate the concept, whilst according to Daniel J.B. Mitchell and Christopher L. Erickson its fall in popularity instead coincided with the decline of unions and
collective bargaining. They write, "With the rapid pace of union membership decline in the early 1980s, followed by erosion relative to the overall workforce thereafter, it became progressively difficult to tie inflation to unions, and thus to worker demands". ==Criticism==