Results 1 to 2 of 2

Thread: The dangers of negative interest rates

  1. #1
    Veteran Member The Lawspeaker's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Last Online
    11-05-2023 @ 04:45 AM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Celto-Germanic
    Ethnicity
    Dutch
    Ancestry
    Brabant, Holland, Guelders and some Hainaut.
    Country
    Netherlands
    Politics
    Norway Deal-NEXIT, Dutch Realm Atlanticist, Habsburg Legitimist
    Religion
    Sedevacantist
    Relationship Status
    Engaged
    Age
    36
    Gender
    Posts
    70,127
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 34,729
    Given: 61,129

    0 Not allowed!

    Default The dangers of negative interest rates

    The dangers of negative interest rates

    Negative interest rates could spark the next financial crisis. And central bankers could end up the object of the public's wrath, says Merryn Somerset Webb.

    by: Merryn Somerset Webb
    7 Oct 2019



    Who do you blame for the last great financial crisis? Just off the top of your head. I bet the phrase that pops up first is "the banks". If it isn't that, it will be something to do with whoever invented subprime mortgages or started "slicing and dicing" risk.

    Unless you are a finance professional, it will not be the regulatory or rate-setting failures of central bankers. In the past decade, they have mostly been portrayed as the saviours of the global economy. Forced by the widespread political failure to provide fiscal stimulus, central bankers went into overdrive and tried to do everything themselves, showering the global economy with easy money and saving the world, and, in European Central Bank president Mario Draghi's case, the euro.

    Their use of quantitative easing might have merged fiscal and monetary policy together. (By raising asset prices artificially, QE has wealth distribution implications.) It might have looked more than a little political: the euro is a political project, so doing "whatever it takes" to save it is also political. And it might have some negative side effects but, the story goes, at least monetary policy did its job of preventing a global meltdown.

    But now the problems they created are becoming obvious, as even Draghi noted in an interview published earlier this week. "The negative side effects as you move forward are more and more visible," he said. Indeed they are.

    Take negative interest rates, something that had almost no precedent when first Sweden, Switzerland and then the ECB deployed them after the 2008 crisis. The Swiss National Bank had charged de facto negative rates on non-resident deposits in the 1970s but that was it.

    Negative interest rates undermine a country's banks and, by extension, its entire economy. Their effect is visible in the share prices of European banks. The Euro Stoxx banks index is down near the 2012 lows it set during the eurozone crisis. By charging fees for deposits, negative rates turn assets into a kind of liability. That is already visible to some wealthy clients of European banks as well as any one with a business account. There is something shocking about actually seeing interest as a cost set against your cash.

    Negative rates also destroy the stability of pension and insurance funds. At a conference in London this week, Peter Spiller of CG Asset Management provided a nasty little example of the damage they can do. Imagine, he said, that you want to have an inflation-adjusted Ł1 for your retirement in 2068 (49 years away). You could look to achieve this perhaps by investing in a gilt that matures then. Right now, you would need to put in Ł2.60 for every Ł1 you get out. Why? Because that is the compounding effect of investing for 49 years on the miserable minus 2.05% yield that the bond is offering investors today.

    The effect may not be as visible as negative nominal rates on deposits, but when rates are negative in either real or nominal terms, cash is no longer helpful to anyone saving for retirement. The lower rates go, the more investors feel they must save.

    There are less immediately obvious problems stemming from very loose monetary policy. The main one is the huge build up in public and private debt across the developed world (the highest ever in peacetime) and the low quality of much of that debt.

    If we were seeing the end of QE and negative interest rates, all these very visible problems could be dismissed as probably temporary and, perhaps, even worth the pain. But we are not.

    Draghi is leaving the ECB being hailed as a hero, but he is also leaving it with rates at minus 0.5% and a new round of QE bond buying under way. He isn't alone: in the month of August, a quarter the G20 central banks lowered their policy rates. And the chat among central bankers is not about how to end it but instead how to make it even more extreme to address the next recession. Chairman Jay Powell recently asked whether the US Federal Reserve should be expanding its tool kit.

    Interest rates can go lower. Outside Japan and the eurozone, most are still in positive territory. And central banks can go direct: merging monetary and fiscal policy with various versions of helicopter money. It might work.

    But this time it might come back to bite. Most people didn't notice the role of the central banks in the last financial crisis. Why would they? Old style monetary policy was important but it was also complicated and boring and hence more or less invisible.

    But negative rates are a different thing altogether. While you can explain the problems they create in complicated ways, there is no need to do so. Most people intuitively feel that negative interest is somehow unnatural. If negative rates cause the next crisis by distorting capital allocation and encouraging unmanageable levels of debt, central bankers will discover that the real danger is to them personally. The whole idea that they are politically independent good guys will come tumbling down.

    Instead ordinary people will see them as dangerous creatives who set in motion an experiment they have no way of reversing or controlling. Just like the bankers in the early 2000s.



    • This article was first published in the Financial Times



    Wake up and smell the coffee.


  2. #2
    Veteran Member The Lawspeaker's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Last Online
    11-05-2023 @ 04:45 AM
    Meta-Ethnicity
    Celto-Germanic
    Ethnicity
    Dutch
    Ancestry
    Brabant, Holland, Guelders and some Hainaut.
    Country
    Netherlands
    Politics
    Norway Deal-NEXIT, Dutch Realm Atlanticist, Habsburg Legitimist
    Religion
    Sedevacantist
    Relationship Status
    Engaged
    Age
    36
    Gender
    Posts
    70,127
    Thumbs Up
    Received: 34,729
    Given: 61,129

    0 Not allowed!

    Default


    In this negative interest rate video, ��YOU'LL DISCOVER EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ��about how negative rates could lead to economic collapse. All the secrets the central bankers DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW, about the devastation of negative interest rates, will be revealed! Negative interest rates have taken over in Japan and Europe, and if they come to the US they'll erode away our economy as well. If you're interested in the future of the US economy this video on the crucial topic of negative interest rates is a must see! We know that healthy economies are built around savings and investment.

    But once negative interest rates are introduced, it not only crushes savings it but it destroys price discovery (which is already highly distorted by ZIRP), once the economy losses price discovery completely the end is near. And the irony is it's the negative interest rates, that the central bankers think is the cure, is actually the poison! There are several vital lessons in this negative interest rate video, but none are as important is understanding at the core of any economy is the efficiency of allocating scarce resources with alternative uses. If a government imposes negative interest rates the economy will gradually move to chaos because the mechanism for allocating those resources has been destroyed (price discover by negative interest rates). In this video you'll discover everything you need to know about negative interest rates in 5 simple, easy to understand steps.
    1. What is at the center of economics and the economy?
    2. Why savings is important (the nemesis of negative interest rates).
    3. Why price discovery is vital to a healthy economy.
    4. How negative interest rates creates chaos int the economy.
    5. And the negative interest rate end game.



    Wake up and smell the coffee.


Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 0
    Last Post: 01-14-2020, 09:04 PM
  2. Replies: 0
    Last Post: 12-22-2018, 05:11 AM
  3. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 10-31-2018, 09:11 PM
  4. Dangers of Masturbation
    By Salem in forum Health and Lifestyle
    Replies: 18
    Last Post: 12-26-2012, 05:13 PM
  5. 'natural levels' of interest rates
    By joe blowe in forum Economics
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 05-16-2011, 03:13 AM

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •