2 minEconomic Concept
Economic Concept

Interest Rates

What is Interest Rates?

The cost of borrowing money or the return on lending money, usually expressed as a percentage of the principal amount over a period. It is a key tool for central banks to influence economic activity.

Historical Background

Interest rates have been a fundamental component of financial systems for centuries. Their management by central banks became a primary tool for macroeconomic stabilization in the 20th century, particularly after the Great Depression and the rise of Keynesian economics.

Key Points

10 points
  • 1.

    Policy Rates: Set by the central bank (e.g., Repo Rate, Reverse Repo Rate, MSF in India) to influence the overall interest rate structure in the economy.

  • 2.

    Market Rates: Determined by the demand and supply of funds in financial markets (e.g., bond yields, commercial bank lending rates, deposit rates).

  • 3.

    Nominal vs. Real Interest Rates: Nominal rate is the stated rate; Real rate = Nominal rate - Inflation rate. Real rates reflect the true cost of borrowing or return on saving.

  • 4.

    Impact on Borrowing Cost: Higher interest rates increase the cost of borrowing for businesses (for investment) and individuals (for consumption like housing, auto loans), thereby dampening demand.

  • 5.

    Impact on Savings Incentive: Higher interest rates generally encourage saving as the return on deposits increases.

  • 6.

    Inflation Control: Raising interest rates reduces money supply and credit growth, which helps to curb inflationary pressures.

  • 7.

    Exchange Rates: Higher domestic interest rates can attract foreign capital, leading to an appreciation of the domestic currency.

  • 8.

    Asset Prices: Affects the valuation of bonds (inverse relationship), equities, and real estate by influencing discount rates and cost of capital.

  • 9.

    Types: Fixed vs. Floating, Short-term vs. Long-term, Prime Lending Rate (PLR), Marginal Cost of Funds based Lending Rate (MCLR), External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR).

  • 10.

    Interest Rate Transmission: The process by which changes in policy rates by the central bank are passed on to market interest rates and ultimately to the real economy.

Visual Insights

Factors Influencing Interest Rates

Illustrates the key factors that influence interest rates in the Indian economy.

Interest Rates

  • RBI Policy
  • Inflation
  • Global Factors

Recent Developments

5 developments

Global interest rate cycles are turning, with major central banks like the US Fed hiking rates to combat inflation.

RBI's decision to maintain a 'prolonged low interest rate' stance, guided by domestic growth-inflation dynamics, diverging from global trends.

Increased adoption of external benchmark lending rates (EBLR) by commercial banks for better monetary policy transmission.

Impact of digital lending and fintech innovations on the interest rate landscape and credit availability.

Debate on the optimal level of real interest rates required to stimulate investment and maintain financial stability.

This Concept in News

1 topics

Source Topic

Stable CPI Index Signals Potential Pause in Interest Rate Hikes

Economy

UPSC Relevance

Very important for UPSC GS Paper 3 (Economy). Understanding interest rate dynamics is crucial for analyzing monetary policy, financial markets, business cycles, and the overall health of the economy. Frequently asked in both Prelims and Mains.