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I would like to discuss my thoughts on the matter here.
This is the thread which prompted me to think in this regard :
Old geographies, new orders -- China, India and the future of Asia
Thoughts are with respect to emerging economies only.
My stand : Interest Rate changes with a sole focus on inflation alone will be detrimental to long term growth prospects for the economy contrary to what the central banks in these countries might perceive to be the case.
Reasons :
(classical view - in literature)
Effect 1 : High interest rates will/are affecting negatively the cash flows of the huge infrastructure projects taken up during the global boom era of pre 2009.
(classical view - in literature)
Effect 2 : It has also been detrimental to present investment in economy which could have led to increased outputs in future.
Fact1 : Not only has the production capacity utilisation fallen from ~85% to around 75% in India but industrial investment has literally nosedived in both Brazil and India.
Fact2 : The NPA assets have also risen mostly in steel & infra sector more than agriculture.
( My Inputs )
Effect 3 :
Because of high cost of borrowing, the firms are tightening their working capitals in a big way. Like reducing inventory levels and reducing the no of shifts in factories etc thereby reducing the factory outputs.
Now, everyone will also agree that in most emerging countries, a significant portion of durable expense is debt funded. Eg Almost 100% of your car is on loan(credit), or say 70% of bikes are on loan, even AC/washing machines etc are on loan say 50% . The high rates therefore killing the consumption levels and people are now delaying their plans to purchase them more and more into future.
How most economists interpret the situation ? This is a momentary pause and everything will again function like a well oiled machine when interest rate drops ? -
This can't be any further from truth. What I will say is the economy in a manner of speaking would have effectively regressed or contracted. And reason is, the economy not only has to prop up the investment levels but demand which had vanished, also has to prop up. Basically your starting point after "the pause" is not where you had stopped before the turmoil but couple of steps behind where you were.
(My inputs)
Effect 4 :
Because of high interest rates, people borrowing are more interested in investing in high return projects or high speculative assets.
This may have a profound effect. These speculative assets may have large gestation periods and a risk element will be introduced and persist in the economy till the project ends. Also, as the world is seeing more of these cyclical shock and growth phases, more and more of the risks will be introduced in the economy
Also the fact that you will have to support your previous high risk projects during the next phase of recession, will make matter more worse.
@LeveragedBuyout Would you be so kind to share your thoughts in this regard ?
This is the thread which prompted me to think in this regard :
Old geographies, new orders -- China, India and the future of Asia
Thoughts are with respect to emerging economies only.
My stand : Interest Rate changes with a sole focus on inflation alone will be detrimental to long term growth prospects for the economy contrary to what the central banks in these countries might perceive to be the case.
Reasons :
(classical view - in literature)
Effect 1 : High interest rates will/are affecting negatively the cash flows of the huge infrastructure projects taken up during the global boom era of pre 2009.
(classical view - in literature)
Effect 2 : It has also been detrimental to present investment in economy which could have led to increased outputs in future.
Fact1 : Not only has the production capacity utilisation fallen from ~85% to around 75% in India but industrial investment has literally nosedived in both Brazil and India.
Fact2 : The NPA assets have also risen mostly in steel & infra sector more than agriculture.
( My Inputs )
Effect 3 :
Because of high cost of borrowing, the firms are tightening their working capitals in a big way. Like reducing inventory levels and reducing the no of shifts in factories etc thereby reducing the factory outputs.
Now, everyone will also agree that in most emerging countries, a significant portion of durable expense is debt funded. Eg Almost 100% of your car is on loan(credit), or say 70% of bikes are on loan, even AC/washing machines etc are on loan say 50% . The high rates therefore killing the consumption levels and people are now delaying their plans to purchase them more and more into future.
How most economists interpret the situation ? This is a momentary pause and everything will again function like a well oiled machine when interest rate drops ? -
This can't be any further from truth. What I will say is the economy in a manner of speaking would have effectively regressed or contracted. And reason is, the economy not only has to prop up the investment levels but demand which had vanished, also has to prop up. Basically your starting point after "the pause" is not where you had stopped before the turmoil but couple of steps behind where you were.
(My inputs)
Effect 4 :
Because of high interest rates, people borrowing are more interested in investing in high return projects or high speculative assets.
This may have a profound effect. These speculative assets may have large gestation periods and a risk element will be introduced and persist in the economy till the project ends. Also, as the world is seeing more of these cyclical shock and growth phases, more and more of the risks will be introduced in the economy
Also the fact that you will have to support your previous high risk projects during the next phase of recession, will make matter more worse.
@LeveragedBuyout Would you be so kind to share your thoughts in this regard ?