The_Banker
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Now that Germany and France have 'officially' come out of recession will we see the European Central Bank raising interest rates in the not too distant future?
If they do will this be another hammer blow to the Irish economy as we seem to be sinking deeper into recession rather than struggling out of it?
As yet there are no green shoots to speak about in Ireland and we seem to have the sickest economy in the Eurozone.
http://www.rte.ie/business/2009/0813/economy.html
I would appreciate the thoughts of those with good economic insight!
BOI are predicting double figure growth from 2010-2015
I love this crystal ball gazing 6 years into the future yet they could not see the sub prime crisis from a distance of about 6 months.
My two cents is we live in a boom bust society and no matter how many experts predict periods of growth or contraction, in reality they are just educated guesses.
Who's to say another "sub prime type" crisis isn't around the corner or an epidemic of greater proportions than the swine flu or a war or some other global issue that will bring us all back into recession? Just because it looks like Germany and France are coming out of recession doesn't mean everything is going to be rosy for the next 10 years.
Now that Germany and France have 'officially' come out of recession will we see the European Central Bank raising interest rates in the not too distant future?
This is complete exageration by the media/politicians. Germany has had one quater of positive GDP change since the start of the recession.
The reason GDP has grown is:
1) decrease in imports (not a sign of economic growth)
2) government stimulus (also not a sign of economic recovery)
Look out for:
1) Increase in industrial production
2) Reduction in unemployment
3) Increase in tax revenue
Until these happen, noone will be able to say the recession is over.
As for BoI predicting double digit growth: Completely gnore what they say/believe. Their (and other banks for that matter) incompetence at making even remotely accurate predictions has been proven beyond any shadow of a doubt.
Cheap money was one of the major causes of this disaster. Rates will go up as fast as they went down. What we need also is the UK to come out of recession and raise their rates as the euro will lonly strenghten futher against sterling.
soooo true it hurts...just posted what they tried to feed me...
whats your thoughts on interest rate increases?
My guess is that a sustained turn in the rate of change of M3 will be enough for the ECB to raise interest rates. So, three months of expansion MoM.Monetary growth continued to decelerate
in June, with the annual growth rate of M3
standing at 3.5%, down from 3.7% in May
(see Chart 5). The month-on-month growth
rate was 0.2% in June (having stood at -0.5%
in May and 0.8% in April), thereby continuing
the pattern of alternating negative and positive
rates observed since the end of 2008. Looking
beyond this volatility in short-term growth
rates confi rms that the pace of monetary
expansion is markedly slower than it was prior
to the intensifi cation of the fi nancial turmoil in
September 2008.
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