I wasn’t really a part of the economy in the 80’s, but I do seem to remember getting some kick ass savings rates for the filthy lucre stowed away in my junior savings account. Young me, didn’t realize at the time that to get those 15% returns on a savings account what the banks had to be charging on the loans they made.
With jobership and homeownership and adultship all having occurred – I’m more than a little concerned about an upward trend in the prime interest rate, because things that are affordable at 3%ish interest become much more untenable at 15 or 20% interest.
“The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark overnight interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point, which means that the folks who borrow from the Fed (which is kind of like the Bank of Canada, and whose customers are other lenders) will now pay in a range from 0.75 per cent to 1 per cent.
Up until Wednesday, the range was as low as 0.5 per cent.
A quarter of a percentage point? Doesn’t sound like much, so no wonder the announcement got overwhelmed by everything else.
Consider this: the Fed’s rate is now double what it is in Canada. It’s very difficult to believe that the decision there will not have a ripple effect that will eventually hit Canadian mortgages and lending rates — and along with them, people who’ve never lived and owed when rates suddenly jack up.
Fed chair Janet Yellen raised interest rates this week, for only the third time since the financial crisis nine years ago. (Reuters)
But let’s think about the decision, which is only — believe it or not — the third time that the Fed has ever raised a rate since the financial crisis that engulfed the world in 2008. (It is, on the other hand, the second hike in three months.)
On the upside, the hike is generally perceived to be an indication of growing strength and optimism in the American marketplace.
“The simple message,” said Fed chair Janet Yellen, who is expected to step down within a year, “is the economy is doing well.”
But what many people in the finance world are expecting is more of the same; that is, more hikes. Another is expected in June, and the Washington Post used the words “more frequent” to describe what the Fed’s hikes will be like from now on.
The purpose of a rate hike, especially while rates have been (when you think about it) remarkably tiny is to keep inflation in check.
But the other side of that coin is what higher rates can do to ordinary consumers, including those on this side of the border.
This is where my head has been lately.
It seems to be we’ve had a full generation of consumers that don’t know the piercing agony that comes when interest rates are high, or who might be inclined to believe that what they’re paying now on, say, their credit card bill is high enough.
Moreover, these consumers may not appreciate to what extent that lending rates have, for almost a decade, have been artificially low. (I’m tempted to call them politically low, too, in light of the 2008 crisis.)
What would higher interest rates mean for homeowners, and small businesses? In a tight economy, they could be tricky. (Submitted by Kara O’Keefe)
Now, some history, both provincial and personal: In the early Eighties, interest rates were not just in the double digits, they were above 20 per cent. The recession that came with it was harsh, deep and sweeping in its destruction.
The local impact was crushing, perhaps because there was an ebullient feeling in the wake of the 1979 Hibernia discovery. In 1988, a few years before he died, St. John’s businessman Andrew Crosbie reflected on the wicked boom and bust of the early Eighties.
“We certainly got caught — but I don’t know if it was in the oil euphoria rather than the interest rate euphoria” that caused so much damage to businesses like his own.”
The idea of being ‘caught’ and forced to make unsavoury financial decisions isn’t particularly appealing – and having one’s future rest on the ‘market’ is distinctly unsettling. :/




9 comments
March 28, 2017 at 6:26 am
john zande
The entire system is unsustainable, and having money almost free (for so long) with no real effect demonstrated just how unsustainable that system is.
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March 28, 2017 at 7:02 am
makagutu
Interest rates at below 1%! My goodness. Our interests have been always double digits and were as high as 27% some time last year. Presently it is at 14% but by the time the bank is finished with their small print, you will get money at 17%.
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March 28, 2017 at 7:18 am
roughseasinthemed
I was an eighties babe. Not as in born then, but made money then. Best thing that ever happened to us. Bought a house, high interest rates and sold before the market crashed. It is doable to pay high interest rates so long as you don’t want lots of flat screen TVs, fancy kitchens, new bathrooms, ten holidays a year, a new car every year or two. Horses for courses.
I don’t agree with the capitalist system, but it can be worked to advantage. Or could. Lots of money floating around works well for small businesses too. But, we are all at the mercy of our lords and master bankers.
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March 28, 2017 at 10:09 am
The Arbourist
@JZ
Precisely. With so many people living in the precariate*right now* what happens to them when rates recover?
It will make 2008 look like a pleasant walk in the park.
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March 28, 2017 at 10:14 am
The Arbourist
@Makagutu
Yeah, now imagine you’ve been spending all the money, all the time at near 0%. What happens to your finances when that balloon goes up?
The problem is that we have a generation that has not known high interest rate and the new set of ground rules/habits that go along with navigating an environment like that.
The millenials have only known the results of quantitative easing and other neo-liberal economic policies that keep interest rates artificially low (while continuing to enrich the proper people of course).
Conversely, it must nice to actually have use for a savings account, instead of having to be forced to invest in the market to get any sort of reasonable rate of return.
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March 28, 2017 at 10:18 am
The Arbourist
@RSitM
Necessarily there must be some winners in the capitalist system, otherwise the proles would revolt and we’d be under some other system.
Agreed. However one of the defining features of the elite is their insular nature. They can arrange, for awhile, not to be affected by the economic turmoil and chaos their policies create.
One would hope that they realize the need for change before the crowd with pitchforks and torches show up.
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March 28, 2017 at 4:04 pm
roughseasinthemed
@ Arb. Do you have a secure job (for now)? What happens when you are old and don’t? Hence, we do what we can, when we can.
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March 29, 2017 at 10:43 am
The Arbourist
@RSitM
I am a public school teacher doing the supply teaching gig, and on the weekends I work at the University in a caretaker gig, also where I do most of my blogging. :)
Being married to someone who does work full time helps as well.
The future? I’m saving, as I always have, the best I can.
Thankfully in Canada, we do have government pension plan and what not.
Given the current political zeitgeist I do seriously wonder if retirement planning (25 years from now) will even be on the table. :/
I have a good job situation, not in terms of making tons of lucre but in terms of flexibility to accommodate caring for senior family.
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March 29, 2017 at 12:11 pm
roughseasinthemed
Hell Arb, it was more of a rhetorical question. I didn’t ask for your CV!
I made my plans. The government changed the pension age (what pension). My partner is currently wandering up and down the streets with a sack barrow at 60. I have had interviews for jobs, but 50s? In my 30s I got every job offer I went for. Old women? Sexism? Nah. Of course not.
So until life changes, we have to suck it. And best use the shitey system we have.
Depressing note of the day. Two things that will never change:
1) Patriarchy
2) Capitalism
Sad, but true.
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