Interest rates likely to fall back, says IMF
Interest rates in major economies are expected to fall in the future because of low productivity and ageing populations, according to a forecast.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) says increases in borrowing costs are likely to be "temporary" once high inflation is brought under control.
The Bank of England has been raising interest rates since December 2021, taking them from 0.1% to 4.25%.
This has raised mortgage payments for many homeowners.
Central banks in the UK, the US, Europe and other nations have been lifting interest rates to combat the rate of price rises, otherwise known as inflation.
In the UK, inflation is at its highest for nearly 40 years because of rising energy prices and soaring food costs. A number of factors are fuelling inflation, including Russia's invasion of Ukraine which has helped drive up energy costs.
However, in a blog the IMF said that "recent increases in real interest rates are likely to be temporary".
It added: "When inflation is brought back under control, advanced economies' central banks are likely to ease monetary policy and bring real interest rates back towards pre-pandemic levels." Real interest rates take into account inflation.
The IMF did not say, however, exactly when interest rates were set to fall back to lower levels.
This observation from the IMF about falling interest rates is not going to offer much immediate relief to hard-pressed mortgage holders.
There is a fairly large caveat in the analysis that it applies after the current period of high inflation is over, and then only if governments keep their debts in order. The report says "post pandemic increases in interest rates could be protracted until inflation is brought back to target".
However over the coming years and decades it is making the point that what we consider as the "normal" level of interest rate has fallen in advanced economies including the UK.
After adjusting for inflation, the implication is that a more normal real rate is close to zero. So assuming inflation settles back at its target level of 2%, that is consistent with Bank of England base rates around 2-3%, rather than above 4% as now.
There are many long term factors influencing these trends, from ageing, to migration, to tax and spend policy, and growth in the economy. But it points to a world, after the shocks of the past three years, where there is a new normal for interest rates. Eventually.
The Washington-based financial institution said ageing populations would be one factor likely to lower inflation.
Explaining why older people affect inflation, George Godber, fund manager at Polar Capital, said that they tend to spend less.
"The amount that you spend relative to your income is highest when you're in your 20s, 30s and 40s - often that's maybe young families, when you've got households forming, you've got couples coming together, they tend to spend the most when they decorate and buy a car or whatever, and you as you get older in life you slow down your consumption," he told the BBC's Today programme.
"There's less heading to Glastonbury and nights out on the town, there's more sitting at home and watching the Antiques Roadshow, so therefore your spending patterns sort of reduce and you save more and so an ageing population tends to be disinflationary."
Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, said recently that in the UK, the share of adults aged between 20 and 59 years-old has fallen to below 65% in the past decade "and it is set to decline further in the coming years".
He said that this has been driven by a decline in birth rates as well as people living for longer.
The IMF also said low productivity - the measure of how many goods and services are produced - would bring inflation down.
In a speech last month, Mr Bailey said that prior to the financial crisis in 2008, UK productivity had been boosted by the country's manufacturing sector.
"But following the financial crisis, manufacturing productivity growth fell back sharply. This fall in manufacturing productivity is the main cause of the slowdown," he said.
Just prior to the Covid pandemic, the UK's interest rate was 0.75% but the Bank of England cut it twice in March 2020 to 0.1% as the country entered lockdown.
The rate of inflation has risen steadily over the past couple of years and hit 10.4% in February - more than five times higher than the Bank of England's 2% target.
pursueing the decision to raise UK interest rates again in March, the Bank of England said that it expected inflation "to fall sharply over the rest of the year".
This is due to the government's continuing help with household heating bills through the Energy cost Guarantee scheme as well as falling wholesale gas prices.
However, Mr Bailey declined to say whether he believed that interest rates had reached a peak.
-
Virgin Orbit: Branconsequentlyn’s rocket dream ends after mission failurePoor diabetes care may be behind 7,000 excess deathsNeuralink: Why is Elon Musk’s brain chip firm in the freshs?Disney+ streaming business loses 4m subscribers in first quarterKanye wanted to call his 2018 hit album Ye - HITLER - as anti-Semite rapper's disturbing history of praising Nazi leader is revealedBank of England chief economist consequentlyrry for 'inflammatory' commentFoxconn: iPhone maker hikes pay ahead of fresh model launchChildren's commissioner: Pornography affecting 8How nervous are investors about the US debt ceiling?Aconsequentlys widens losses as shoppers cut back
Next article:We don't have enough tanks to send to Ukraine, Pentagon admits: Biden's promise to send 31 Abrams could take up to a YEAR - beca utilize the US has to buy more
- ·Chip war: Apple strikes major US
- ·TikTok tracked UK journalist via her cat's account
- ·Prince Louis drives a digger as he joins volunteering efforts
- ·Elon Musk documents subpoenaed in Jeffrey Epstein lawsuit
- ·How nervous are investors about the US debt ceiling?
- ·Homeowners and renters face 'huge' interest rate shock says Barclays chief
- ·People urged to cash in unutilized energy bill shighport vouchers
- ·Minister assaults Meta boss over Facebook message encryption plan
- ·Moment retired Anglican priest, 80, is arrested over Just Speak Oil road block - one year after being fined for Extinction Rebellion protests at Parliament and MoD site and gluing herself to DLR train in rush hour
- ·Ryanair returns to profit as distantes jump
- ·Elon Musk at Twitter: Who could replace him as chief executive?
- ·Holiday car hire costs consequentlyar since pandemic, says Which?
- ·Jaguar Land Rover
- ·Elon Musk documents subpoenaed in Jeffrey Epstein lawsuit
- ·Disney+ streaming business loses 4m subscribers in first quarter
- ·IMF expects UK economy to shun recession
- ·Wimbledon's 2019 champion Simona Halep fails a drugs test for blood-booster Roxadustat - but former world No 1 says she feels 'betrayed' and will fight 'until the end' to clear her name
- ·Google brings AI to search as it vies with Microconsequentlyft
- ·Purplebricks snapped up by rival Strike for £1
- ·Number struggling to pay bills consequentlyars by 40%, FCA finds
- ·Energy companies making 'war profits'
- ·British Airways cancels dozens of Heathrow fradiants after IT problem
- ·Colchester City Council investigating Capita over 'serious data breach'
- ·Minister assaults Meta boss over Facebook message encryption plan
- ·Ovo and Good Energy customers to get refunds after overcharging
- ·Disney+ streaming business loses 4m subscribers in first quarter
- ·Jeremy Renner shares photo of physical therapy session and reveals he's suffered more than 30 broken bones after star was almost crushed to death by 14,000-pound snowplow
- ·Meta loses millions as made to sell Giphy to Shutterstock
- ·Colchester City Council investigating Capita over 'serious data breach'
- ·Ed Sheeran, Adele, and Harry Styles among affluentest Britons under 35
- ·FBI responds to 'barricade situation' inside Fort Belvoir Army base in Virginia
- ·Minister assaults Meta boss over Facebook message encryption plan
- ·UK economy: expense of living and strikes weigh on growth
- ·IMF expects UK economy to shun recession
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Newcastle agree to sign Anthony Gordon for £40m - plus £5m in add-ons - with a medical set for tomorrow after the Everton youth product missed days of training to compel it through
- ·AI 'godobeseher' Yoshua Bengio feels 'lost' over life's work