mb444
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2012
- Messages
- 5,410
- Reaction score
- 1
- Country
- Location
You guys really need to understand the basics.
Economics is a hard subject.
You are spouting bond rates of different countries - whilst ignoring the currency and inflation.
Let’s take your stupid comparison of yen based bond rate and taka based bond rate
Japan’s inflation is running at 3%. Whilst BD inflation is at 10%.
Neither is giving a real term return! Bond holder is losing roughly the same on both.
Now let’s look at the IMF interest rate at 2%. US inflation is at 5.5%. Again, IMF is lending way below inflation.
@UKBengali you are the only one who understands economics in this miserable forum.
This dude has no understanding of economics.
Watches a few YouTube videos by cranks - and thinks he is Paul Krugman
So what is your point regarding the bond rate? The different bond rates were quoted to simply point out they have all risen. Bond rates takes into consideration inflation.
Yes lets do take Taka and Yen bond rates. Taka bonds will give negative real rate of return using your 10% inflation rate. Yen will give even lower rate of return, its bond rate is around 0.26% with its national interest rate set at -0.1% and inflation rate running at as you say 3%.
They are not really comparable, yen bonds are sold in open market, taka bonds are not.
What is IMFs interest got to do with US inflation? IMF issues its own bonds, they have no reference to Federal reserves or US policies.
If your position is 2% is a good deal again what are you comparing it to? Global inflation, BDs own inflation? A loan from IMF to tide over a liquidity issue can not be compared to bonds that are reflective of long terms trends.
BD internal inflation has bugger all to do with a loan taken in USD. You are making the mistake in thinking BD USD loan value in real term will magically depreciate by the rate of US inflation rate. It will not. It would have done so if the loan was in Taka.
BD will have to pay the loan in USD it earns via trade or remittances in absolute terms.
It is also not known at the moment what the term of the loan is. BD is not taking a long term loan but rather a very short term one. 2% may not be an annual cost. IMF is a collective, it does not loan money with a view to making a real term loss.
Last edited: