Financial Repression or Debt Relief through Inflation | Since the financial crises of 2008 and 2009, ‘Financial Repression’ has been the only game in town.
In a late bid to
address soaring inflation in the Euro area, the European Central Bank
(ECB) increased interest rates for the first time in 11 years in July
2022, raising its main rate to 0 percent after eight years of negative
rates, and reaching 0,75% today. Notwithstanding, Eurozone inflation hit
a new record high of 9.1% in August, further deepening Europe’s
cost-of-living crisis.
As inflation continues to hit new records, these timid increases in
interest rates seem more like small concessions than effective measures,
only slightly deviating policymakers from their overarching policy of
‘debt relief through inflation’.
Financial Repression or Debt Relief through Inflation | Since
the financial crises of 2008 and 2009, ‘Financial Repression’ has been
the only game in town. With government debt in many cases close to (and
in some cases over) 100 percent of gross domestic product, European
governments desperately need to get the lowest interest rates possible.
To achieve this, policymakers implement policies to redirect funds to
the states’ coffers that in a free-market environment would go
elsewhere, or would become much more expensive.
By providing financing at negative interest rates in real terms
(after inflation) with sovereign bonds as collateral, and having central
banks buy sovereign bonds directly on the markets, policymakers create a
captive domestic market for government debt.
To complete the picture, inflation is kept alive and eventually
unleashed through these “quantitative easing” policies, obliterating the
real value of financial savings, since these are for the main part
directly or indirectly linked to the level of real interest rates (bank
savings, capital guaranteed life insurance, pension funds, bond and
money market investment funds, etc.)
A Grey Future for Retirees | These public
policy-induced very negative real interest rates represent what
economists call “financial repression”, since the main designated
victims are the long-term savers. [...]
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