Brendan Burgess
Founder
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· When interest rates rise, the true cost of our €200 billion and growing national debt will hit home
surely increasing interest rates only affect us as we roll over the borrowings, issuing new paper in order to repay the bonds falling due for repayment?
it's not just a matter of what borrowing costs. Ireland is required by the EU's stability and growth pact to have a medium term budgetary objective of a structural deficit (i.e. a persistent budgetary deficit) of 0.5% of GDP. It's currently 0.7%. Under the SGP Ireland's debt to GDP ratio should be 60% by 2019. It was 87.6 % in 2016. According to the EU https://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/info/files/2017-european-semester-country-report-ireland-en.pdf) IE's debt to GDP reduction is due to increased economic activity rather than debt reduction. Also, the Irish Fiscal Council has commented negatively on IE's high debt levels.http://www.fiscalcouncil.ie/pre-budget-statements/pre-budget-2018-statement/.When interest rates rise, the true cost of our €200 billion and growing national debt will hit home
Yes, but as BB said in post # 10 often the interest rates and terms of historic debt are fixed. According to this [broken link removed] Ireland's implicit interest rate is about 3.4%, a figure confirmed by the NTMA at a PAC meeting last year.We have been repaying more expensive debt, as much as possible, and issuing cheaper debt to replace it.
We have been repaying more expensive debt, as much as possible, and issuing cheaper debt to replace it.
One wonders whether it would be prudent to borrow "too much" now to redeem down the line?
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