Thirty-five years after former U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Paul Volcker left office (and nearly three years after his death), the mere mention of his name still gives shivers to Latin Americans who remember the economic devastation caused by his battle against runaway inflation in the 1980s. With U.S. inflation near a 40-year high, at 8.3 percent in August, Fed Chair Jerome Powell recently signaled policymakers' commitment to hiking interest rates further, prompting many to wonder if Latin America is adequately protected against the collateral economic damage of another “Volcker Moment.”