How do negative interest rates work? | CNBC Explains - YouTube

Channel: CNBC International

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When the economy is in crisis, central banks take center stage.
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Central banks are charged with keeping prices stable
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and ensuring economic growth, among other responsibilities.
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To that end, they have a range of tools at their disposal,
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including controlling the supply of money, setting interest rates
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and regulating private lenders.
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But one idea being talked about as a way to shore up a shrinking economy
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has the potential to turn the way we think about money upside down.
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Negative interest rates.
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In June 2014, the European Central Bank began a great economic experiment.
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Faced with slow economic growth and inflation way below the bank’s target rate,
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the bank did something revolutionary. It began to charge a negative interest rate.
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To understand why this was so radical, it’s important to think about how interest rates work.
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Anyone lending money usually expects to be paid a fee, known as interest,
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to cover the risk or inconvenience of not having their cash to hand.
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We see this with banks paying interest to savers and consumers paying interest on home loans.
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The cost of borrowing, as a percentage of the original sum loaned, is the interest rate.
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But negative interest rates turn the world upside down,
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with borrowers charging lenders for holding onto their money.
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So, what are central banks trying to achieve by making interest rates negative?
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Imagine a big lever that they push back and forth as they attempt to keep the economy on course.
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When central banks transact with major financial institutions,
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changes in the rates received by these lenders gradually ripple out
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through the wider network of commercial clients and consumers.
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When prices are rising and there are fears that the economy is expanding
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at an unsustainable rate, central banks pull back the lever
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and raise interest rates, making loans more expensive.
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But if inflation is falling and the economy isn’t growing
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as fast as it could, central banks push the lever
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and lower the cost of borrowing to stimulate demand and encourage spending.
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But what happens when interest rates are already low and there isn’t enough lending and spending
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to spark the economy back to life?
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Central banks can charge financial institutions for not putting their money to work.
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In the same way that you or I might put any spare cash into a savings account,
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commercial banks store their reserves with central banks.
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In a world of negative interest rates, instead of paying interest on these savings,
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the central bank charges financial institutions for holding onto them.
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The idea is to encourage banks to lend this money
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to consumers and businesses, even if they don’t expect a big return.
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As consumers spend and firms invest for the future, the economy begins to grow again.
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So how have negative interest rates worked out in the real world?
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In the wake of the Great Financial Crisis, central banks across the globe
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cut interest rates to fight the recession.
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...that's towards the aggressive end of the rate cuts...
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...another three quarter point cut...
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...unprecedented rate cut...
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Just a few years later, five central banks found themselves facing further economic difficulties,
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and took the plunge into negative territory, pushing their headline rates below zero.
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Although intended as temporary measures, none of these institutions
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have yet been able to lift rates above zero for very long.
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The European Central Bank believes its negative interest rate policies
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have been responsible for up to 0.5% of economic growth in the euro zone since 2014.
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That may not sound all that impressive, but it still represented more than $65B of GDP in 2019.
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Elsewhere results have been mixed, with the Swedish Riksbank abandoning
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its negative interest rate policy despite failing to consistently reach its inflation target.
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What’s the biggest threat to negative interest rates then?
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Cold, hard, cash.
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Why watch your savings shrink when you can have a form of money that holds its value instead?
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For large financial institutions dealing with billions of dollars,
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withdrawing everything and stuffing it under the mattress isn’t an option.
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This means they’ll accept the pain of rates being pushed a little way below zero
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as the price of knowing their money’s safe with their central bank.
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But banks are wary of passing on negative rates to businesses and consumers with smaller balances,
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who may find it easier to switch to cash rather than see their savings shrink.
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If the difference between the central bank rate and the rates they pass on to customers gets squeezed,
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that means banks stand to make less profit.
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Although that may not sound like a tragedy, it’s possible that pushing the interest rate lever too far
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may put banks under too much pressure and cause them to lend less.
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That’s the opposite of what central banks are looking for when they lower rates.
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Some economists think this ‘reversal interest rate’ is likely to be around -1% in the euro zone.
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So far, the lowest central banks’ main policy rates have sunk is -0.75%.
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While Danish banks have offered mortgages with negative interest rates to prospective homeowners,
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consumers still aren’t quite being paid to borrow once fees are taken into account.
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And saving for the future is more difficult than ever as savings accounts and pension funds offer low returns.
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A negative interest rate policy may have its limits, and it certainly won’t head off deflation or recession alone.
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But in a world of low interest rates, don’t be surprised if more central banks
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look to turn the world upside down as economic uncertainty looms.
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Hi guys. Thanks for watching our video.
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Whether you're a borrower or a lender, we'd love to know your thoughts on negative interest rates.
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Comment below to let us know, and remember: subscribe.