Interest rate and inflation
Interest rate is related to the currency, inflation and net export. Basically speaking,
the
normal interest rate cannot be below zero. But last month the Sweden central
bank cut the interest
rate to -0.1%. Here is the news I got from BBC.
After
that, some economists said that Sweden became the latest Scandinavian state to
join Europe’s escalating currency wars. So why it happened?
This
graph showed the tendency of interest rate in Sweden. After the financial
crisis in 2008, Sweden kept a low interest rate which comes near to 0. Apart
from the quantitative easing policy, there are some other significant reasons.
l
The
instability of global economy is increasing, especially in Europe.
l
Stimulate
the economy with expansionary monetary policy.
l
To
relive the risks of long-term deflation and low oil price.
Central
bank negative rates are intended to encourage companies and individuals to
borrow more, increasing investment and consumer spending and driving up
inflation.
In the
other word, the deflation in Sweden hinders the economy. Deflation can be
regarded as the negative inflation, Sweden suffered from the deflation recent
years.
The deflation
means that the prices, money supply and economic growth continue to decline,
which will finally cause the high unemployment and recession. it usually begin
with the price declining, falling
prices mean consumers hold off purchasing goods in the belief that they will
get even cheaper, which in turn damages the economy as demand drops, producers
suffer and unemployment ensues. Sweden's price growth of just 0.1 percent is
well below the central bank's target of 2 percent and this has put pressure on the
Riksbank (central bank in Sweden) to stimulate more spending, which could be
problematic for a country with high levels of borrowing and household debt. The
low interest rate policies are aimed to ride up the inflation rate to 2%, so
that the country could avoid the risk in Japan, Japan experienced what has
become known as a "lost decade" to deflation in the 1990s.