国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Real interest rate risk

By Zhang Monan (China Daily) Updated: 2013-01-09 08:07

Despite talk of easy money as the 'new normal', it is likely the cheap financing for indebted countries is ending

Since 2007, the financial crisis has pushed the world into an era of low, near zero, interest rates and quantitative easing, as most developed countries seek to reduce debt pressure and perpetuate fragile payment cycles. But there is a strong risk that real (inflation-adjusted) interest rates will rise over the next decade.

The total capital assets of central banks worldwide amount to $18 trillion, or 19 percent of global GDP twice the level of 10 years ago. This gives them plenty of ammunition to guide market interest rates lower as they combat the weakest recovery since the Great Depression. In the United States, the Federal Reserve has lowered its benchmark interest rate 10 times since August 2007, from 5.25 percent to a zone between zero and 0.25 percent, and it has reduced the discount rate 12 times (by a total of 550 basis points since June 2006) to 0.75 percent. The European Central Bank has lowered its main refinancing rate eight times, by a total of 325 basis points, to 0.75 percent. The Bank of Japan has twice lowered its interest rate, which now stands at 0.1 percent. And the Bank of England has cut its benchmark rate nine times, by 525 points, to an all-time low of 0.5 percent.

But this vigorous attempt to reduce interest rates is distorting capital allocation. The US, with the world's largest deficits and debt, is the biggest beneficiary of cheap financing. With the persistence of Europe's sovereign-debt crisis, safe-haven effects have driven the yield of 10-year US Treasury bonds to their lowest level in 60 years, while the 10-year swap spread - the gap between a fixed-rate and a floating-rate payment stream - is negative, implying a real loss for investors.

The US government is now trying to repay old debt by borrowing more; in 2010, average annual debt creation (including debt refinance) moved above $4 trillion, or almost one-fourth of GDP, compared to the pre-crisis average of 8.7 percent of GDP. As this figure continues to rise, investors will demand a higher risk premium, causing debt-servicing costs to rise. And, once the US economy shows signs of recovery and the Fed's targets of 6.5 percent unemployment and 2.5 percent annual inflation are reached, the authorities will abandon quantitative easing and force real interest rates higher.

Japan, too, is now facing emerging interest-rate risks, as the proportion of public debt held by foreigners reaches a new high. While the yield on Japan's 10-year bond has dropped to an all-time low in the last nine years, the biggest risk, as in the US, is a large increase in borrowing costs as investors demand a higher risk premium.

Once Japan's sovereign-debt market becomes unstable, refinancing difficulties will hit domestic financial institutions, which hold a massive volume of public debt on their balance sheets. The result will be chain reactions similar to those seen in Europe's sovereign-debt crisis, with a vicious circle of sovereign and bank debt leading to credit-rating downgrades and a sharp increase in bond yields. Japan's own debt crisis will then erupt with full force.

Viewed from the perspective of creditors, the age of cheap finance for the indebted countries is over. To some extent, the over-accumulation of US debt reflects the global perception of zero risk. As a result, the external-surplus countries (including China) essentially contribute to the suppression of long-term US interest rates, with the average US Treasury bond yield dropping 40 percent between 2000 and 2008. Thus, the more US debt that these countries buy, the more money they lose.

That is especially true of China, the world's second-largest creditor country (and the US' largest creditor). But this arrangement is quickly becoming unsustainable. China's far-reaching shift to a new growth model implies major structural and macroeconomic changes in the medium and long term. The renminbi's unilateral revaluation will end, accompanied by the gradual easing of external liquidity pressure. With risk assets' long-term valuations falling and pressure to prick price bubbles rising, China's capital reserves will be insufficient to refinance the developed countries' debts cheaply.

China is not alone. As a recent report by the international consultancy McKinsey & Company argues, the next decade will witness rising interest rates worldwide amid global economic rebalancing. For the time being, the developed economies remain weak, with central banks attempting to stimulate anemic demand. But the tendency in recent decades - and especially since 2007 - to suppress interest rates will be reversed within the next few years, owing mainly to rising investment from the developing countries.

Moreover, China's aging population, and its strategy of boosting domestic consumption, will negatively affect global savings. The world may enter a new era in which investment demand exceeds desired savings, which means that real interest rates must rise.

Project Syndicate

Zhang Monan is a fellow of the China Information Center, fellow of the China Foundation for International Studies, and a researcher at the China Macroeconomic Research Platform.

(China Daily 01/09/2013 page8)

...
陆川县| 湘乡市| 桃江县| 祁东县| 商洛市| 五寨县| 青浦区| 高雄市| 洪江市| 肇源县| 日喀则市| 宜良县| 济宁市| 文水县| 道孚县| 云和县| 班戈县| 台前县| 佛学| 桑植县| 左权县| 宜昌市| 历史| 定南县| 宁强县| 仪征市| 龙里县| 扎赉特旗| 武宣县| 芷江| 进贤县| 黄大仙区| 苍南县| 岳阳县| 安国市| 遂川县| 平乐县| 泸水县| 额济纳旗| 海盐县| 永兴县|