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by pas
2316 days ago
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It's a cost of having money, but not spending it. The central bank pays a negative interest on excess deposits. So banks are motivated to lend it out. (Eg. take on more risk.) https://www.ecb.europa.eu/pub/pdf/scpwps/ecb.wp2283~2ccc0749... One problem that becomes a bit hard is that in the retail sector if interest rates go below zero people are willing to simply withdraw the money, which would hurt banks' ability to lend. (Eg. the central bank would have to add funding via some mechanism, such as lowering the fractional ratio, or QE . [Or paying interest on reserves. But that would go against the negative interest on excess reserves.]) The paper concludes that the negative interest rates resulted in more loans. |
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How did holding money become so worthless in the first place?
Can this really be natural, or is there massive central bank shenaningans behind it? Clearly savers lose, but who benefits?