Status: 02/11/2022 08:11 a.m
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Even if the ECB has not yet heralded a turnaround in interest rates – the period of permanently low interest rates seems to be over. This not only has noticeable consequences for construction loans, but also for the federal budget.
By Hans-Joachim Vieweger, ARD Capital Studio
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It would be a dream for home builders: The bank not only grants an interest-free loan, but also adds something to it. That sounds crazy. But for the federal government as a borrower, this has been a reality for years. Investors are literally vying for the paper that the federal government is using to finance its debt. The federal government was recently even able to make a profit by taking on new debt.
Hans Joachim Vieweger
ARD Capital Studio
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But that could soon be a thing of the past. Because interest rates are rising. Over time, this should also affect the federal budget, says Reiner Holznagel, President of the Taxpayers’ Association. “Of course we don’t have a problem at the moment because the loans we have now are firmly secured. And the conditions cannot be changed,” he explains. “But in the medium and long term we will face an additional burden. And of course we see that in the federal budget: if interest rates rise, the expenses will also increase in the medium to long term, and that will then be missing elsewhere.”
Turnaround in interest rates for politically critical situation
Otto Fricke, the budgetary spokesman for the FDP parliamentary group, also advises caution: interest rate hikes are critical for politicians because the familiar is coming to an end and one has to adapt to new financing conditions. He sees particular problems coming to countries that have higher debts than Germany. “Because the difference in interest rates and the faster increase in interest rates in Italy or Greece, for example, are the announcement of new problems at European level,” says Fricke.
This brings back memories of the European sovereign debt crisis that started in 2010, to which the European Central Bank reacted with its long-term policy of low interest rates. What drives many savers to despair to this day provided relief for the national budgets.
Debt service is becoming significantly more expensive
Admittedly, as quickly as the proportion of spending on new and old debts in households has fallen, it can rise again just as quickly. “A good ten years ago we had to raise more than 30 billion euros to service our debts,” says taxpayer president Holznagel. “Today it’s almost four billion euros, so significantly less. But if interest rates rise by just one percentage point, that will have an impact of 13 billion on the federal budget.”
This doesn’t happen overnight, but especially in times of low interest rates, small changes can quickly have a big impact – as private borrowers know.
Balancing short-term and long-term debt
And something else is basically the same for home builders and the federal government, adds the FDP politician Fricke: You have to decide for what term new loans are to be taken out. Do you prefer to borrow in the short term – with lower interest rates – or rather in the long term with higher interest rates. “The latter has the great advantage that I have calculable expenses in the household, the former has the advantage that I can curb new debt at this point in the short term,” says Fricke.
Because the yields on one- and two-year government bonds are still negative, the federal government can still earn money with this form of credit. In the case of longer-term bonds, on the other hand, i.e. maturities of five years or more, the time of negative yields seems to be over – and with it the pleasant time for financial policy.
Turnaround in interest rates on the markets: What does this mean for the national budget?
Hans-Joachim Vieweger, ARD Berlin, 10.2.2022 · 08:44
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