Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Negativity
I'd seen it suggested, before the Bank of
England floated the idea today, that setting negative interest rates would be a way to encourage
lending and spending. Reading up this evening, I saw Denmark
actually set a rate of -.2%, in July last year. Surprising, I thought.
Denmark is a small, northern European country, with tremendous renewable
energy reserves, a sensible defence force, decent social provision, an
educated populace and so on - just like we would be. If its economy is a
basket case like the UK's, I thought, then why hasn't Alistair Darling
been bellowing about it before now? So I checked. The reason Denmark set
negative interest rates is because its currency (yes - it doesn't use
the Euro but pegs the Danish krone) is so strong, and so attractive to
investors who are piling into it that its strength needs to be curbed.
Precisely the situation the McCrone report, in the 1970s, would arise with a Scottish pound.
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