Posts in "Interest Rates"

Joseph Gauthier's picture
By John Galt at 4:53PM

Build America Bonds

Recently, I stumbled across an article entitled, "BABs saves issuers $12 billion, Treasury says." According to the Treasury, "state and local governments will save $12.3 billion in borrowing costs by issuing federally subsidized taxable bonds, called Build America Bonds, during the first year of the program." Up until now, I had never heard of BABs, and as it turns out, they were part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

But, what exactly is a Build America Bond (BAB)? Build America Bonds are taxable municipal bonds with special tax credits and subsidies. There are two types of BABs: tax credit and direct payment. The former carries a federal subsidy that gives the bondholder a refundable tax credit. The latter carries a federal subsidy of 35% of the interest being paid to the issuer.

In the case of direct payment BABs, according to The Wall Street Journal, "the interest rates paid to investors are higher. But the U.S. government pays 35% of the interest, bringing the amount that" the state or local government pays to less than what "it would have paid with tax-exempt bonds." For example, consider the "$1.3-billion Build America Bond issued in October to rebuild the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and make it earthquake-resistant ... the amount that the Bay Area Toll Authority [paid] ... [was] 4.07% over 40 years compared with 5.5%."


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Luke Walker's picture
By Luke Walker at 8:56PM

Sound economics or insanity?

bernankeAlbert Einstein once defined insanity as "doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result."

An article in USA Today entitled "Fed keeps interest rates near zero; economy continues to 'strengthen'" seems to fit the definition.

I would go out of my way to strongly emphasize the quotes around the word strengthen. Artificially low interest rates are what brought our economy to the sad state it is in and are what continue to drive the economy closer to a depression. Though the article pretty much spouts typical Keynesian rhetoric and acts as though a "jobless recovery" is a completely rational explanation for the current state of un-employment in the country, it does contain one small grain of truth:

Super-low interest rates are good for borrowers who can get a loan and are willing to take on more debt. But those same low rates hurt savers. They're especially hard on people living on fixed incomes who are earning measly returns on savings accounts and certificates of deposit.

The article does not explicitly explain why low interest rates hurt savers and low income earners but those who are familiar with Austrian economics will know that it is the inflation that is born from these low interest rates that causes the destruction.


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Matt Cockerill's picture
By Matt Cockerill at 6:53AM

Austrian Economics: A Safe Bet if There Ever Was One

The  court economists  of the state ridicule genuine free-market economists as cranks and ideologues, throughly discredited by the current economics crisis. However, if these Keynesians and phony capitalists would step away from the ideological homogenity of the establishment bubble for a second, they would find that those economists whose methodologies most stringently uphold individualism and radical capitalism alone predicted the current crisis.

Specificially, The Austrian School of economics and its most public advocate were warning that the Fed's "easy," policies on interest rates would lead to crisis long before such a crisis ever occured. Though to the layman their remarkable foresight may seem like dumb luck,  we know better. Consider Ludwig von Mises'  condemnation of Bernankeite monetary policies in his 1950 essay "Middle of Road leads to Socialism:"


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Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 11:38PM

The Trouble with Manipulation

Among it's various other faults, one of the greatest problems with the Federal Reserve is it's manipulation of interest rates, which would otherwise -- in a truly free market, that is -- be a price determined by supply and demand just like any other.
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Chet Butterworth's picture
By Chet Butterworth at 2:45AM

Negative Interest Rates and Inflation??

Are negative interest rates and inflation the answer to all our economic problems?

Educated readers? No.

High school economics class? No.

Harvard professor and Bush advisor, Gregory Mankiw? Yes.


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Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 3:45PM

Insanity in the New York Times

The NYT published an Op-Ed from a Harvard economist a few days ago which is either indicative of insanity or of an early celebration of 4/20.  It argues that the Fed should continue cutting interest rates to help the economy -- yes, yes they have already cut rates to essentially zero, but they could go lower still, "to, say, negative 3 percent."  "At that interest rate," the article continues, "you could borrow and spend $100 and repay $97 next year.
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Bonnie Kristian's picture
By Bonnie Kristian at 6:41PM

Newstopia Explains the Reserve Bank

This video is from early 2008, and refers to the Australian Reserve Bank, but...well...watch it and you'll get the idea.  It's possibly the clearest - or at least funniest - explanation of our own central banking system I've seen in a while, and is particularly relevant in light of the recent, ongoing, and harmful manipulation of our economy, with Fed rate cuts finally reaching zero.  As this New York Ti
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