The IMF would replace the ECB as lender of last resort; why would control from Washington be better than Frankfurt?
Is there any possibility of the control of interest rates to be temporarly transfered back to the Irish Central Bank for a period of 3-5 years?
If the government could give a commitment to keep interest rates low, it would make it easier for people to accept a lower standard of living.
If things improve in the economy, rates could be adjusted to ECB levels (assuming they have risen in the meantime).
It is too low interest rates and too much borrowing that created this mess. How is more of the same going to possibly solve it?
A few comments:
1. There were a few months in late 2008/early 2009 where Ireland could only borrow money from the ECB. Would we not have went bankrupt if the ECB decided not to lend us the cash at that time?
4. Before Argentina broke the link with the US dollar, the peso was trading at 1:1. After they broke this link (their devaluation), within a few weeks they needed three pesos to purchase one US dollar. In the 90's most homeowners took out morgages in dollars as the interest rate was a percent or two lower that borrowing in the peso. After devaluation, they still had to pay their morgage in dollars!
Yes, but if the government could keep rates low it would give it more scope to cut salaries in the civil service or introduce a property, for example. Therefore wages would come down but if monthly mortgages stayed low in the medium term it would help ease the pain. When thing improve in a few years they can increase the rate.
I stand corrected, Protocol. But this forecast of the ESRI is really hard to believe. By definition, the ultimate test of an exchange rate is that it achieves the correct BoP. By these projections the exchange rate looks just about right. But I do not believe that - not after a 40% appreciation against sterling. The ESRI is forecasting a huge fall in imports in 2010 compared to exports. I would love to see the breakdown of that for our trade with the UK. I suppose it could be positive if the big increase in the volume of our imports from there (witness border queues) does not counter the big drop in the prices, but it would also need our exports to hold up even though they are 40% dearer.Correct, the balance of payments is currently in deficit, but the deficit is falling fast.
The data is below, with the deficit estimated to fall to under 2bn in 2009 and turn into a surplus during 2010.
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I stand corrected, Protocol. But this forecast of the ESRI is really hard to believe. By definition, the ultimate test of an exchange rate is that it achieves the correct BoP. By these projections the exchange rate looks just about right. But I do not believe that - not after a 40% appreciation against sterling. The ESRI is forecasting a huge fall in imports in 2010 compared to exports. I would love to see the breakdown of that for our trade with the UK. I suppose it could be positive if the big increase in the volume of our imports from there (witness border queues) does not counter the big drop in the prices, but it would also need our exports to hold up even though they are 40% dearer.
Yes, they are predicting big increases in our trade balance, driven by large falls in imports.
I suppose new cars are a big component of this?
Why does the government not give much more prominence to this very positive aspect of our macro economic position?
The budget balance gets much more coverage than the balance of payments. This is partly reasonable, as the BoP is less important inside EMU.
Why is everybody saying we have a problem with competitiveness?
vERY good point. I have been saying this all along. Our exports are holding up, our industrial production is resilient.
Our problem does not seem to be pay rates in industry causing a lack of competitiveness in industry, it seems to be excessive non traded costs, like comm rents, insurance, energy, etc.
Correct, the balance of payments is currently in deficit, but the deficit is falling fast.
The data is below, with the deficit estimated to fall to under 2bn in 2009 and turn into a surplus during 2010.
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Isn't the main reason that our exports have stood up so well is the growth in the pharmaceutical industry which are driven by US multinationals. This growth offset the weaknesses in other traditional export sectors such as food, computers etc. So the competiviness issue is still relevant. It just gets hidden if you look at the headline figure.
As a novice in this area, Is there a flaw in having a common interest rate for a large group of countries?
The ECB set interest rates low at the start of the decade which helped fuel the proprty bubble. Now it is possible in a year or two, if the bigger eurozone countries recover quicker than us, interest rates will rise and this would hamper any recovery here. I'm just wondering if the interest rate set by the ECB may not actually suit every individual country.
Interesting point Chris. So ideally our interest rates should have been increased in the early 2000's to keep house prices down and reduce the demand for higher wages.
Would lower interest rates for the next couple of years be a good thing now though to encourage people to spend? There seems to be some evidence that people are saving more.
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