I was just skimming through the Central bank reports of India and Vietnam and Brazil etc. The singular focus on inflation i would say has hurt the economy more badly and ways you guys don't even think and don't even discuss.
Lets consider the policy of using high interest rates as one stop shop for tackling economy woes.
Effect 1 : High interest rates will/are affecting negatively the cash flows of the huge infrastructure projects taken up during the global boom era of pre 2009.
Effect 2 : It has also been detrimental to present investment in economy which could have led to increased outputs in future.
Fact1 : Not only has the production capacity utilisation fallen from ~85% to around 75% in India but industrial investment has literally nosedived in both Brazil and India.
Fact2 : The NPA assets have also risen mostly in steel & infra sector more than agriculture.
We had a similar debate going on during the Reagan era as well in 80s. Although our economies are different but you guys should think out of the box for a start.
(This is most important and surprisingly been missing in the discourse)
Effect 3 :
Because of high cost of borrowing, the firms are tightening their working capitals in a big way. Like reducing inventory levels and reducing the no of shifts in factories etc thereby reducing the factory outputs.
Now, everyone will also agree that in most emerging countries, a significant portion of durable expense is debt funded. Eg Almost 100% of your car is on loan(credit), or say 70% of bikes are on loan, even AC/washing machines etc are on loan say 50% . The high rates therefore killing the consumption levels and people are now delaying their plans to purchase them more and more into future.
How most economists interpret the situation ? This is a momentary pause and everything will again function like a well oiled machine when interest rate drops ? -
This can't be any further from truth. What I will say is the economy in a manner of speaking would have effectively regressed or contracted. And reason is, the economy not only has to prop up the investment levels but demand which had vanished, also has to prop up. Basically your starting point after "the pause" is not where you had stopped before the turmoil but couple of steps behind where you were.
Hope I made the third effect sufficiently lucid.
ps. I am not sure how on topic the post was !
While I agree with your analysis partially, I think you've misunderstood, somewhat, the motivations behind the high interest rate, at least in India.
While the RBI's (Indian central bank) inflation mandate is important, it has a financial stability mandate as well (of course, no central bank discusses financial stability concerns as explicitly as inflation concerns). Focussing narrowly on the inflation mandate, consumer price index (CPI) inflation was at double digits last year and is expected to be at around 6% in January. I think the 6% figure is reasonable for a developing country like India. If 6% sustains up to March, we should see some monetary easing.
Coming to the more relevant part for this discussion, the financial stability aspect, the current RBI governor is a strong believer in leverage cycles i.e. like GDP, aggregate leverage expands and contracts; peaks of leverage represent the most pressing challenges to financial stability. High interest rates force bad projects (and the companies that run them) that were executed only because credit was cheap to shut down. Highly leveraged firms either have to find a way to deleverage (if they are good enough to attract investment) or they have to shut down. This has been seen in the case of the Jaiprakash Group, a huge infrastructure conglomerate, that seems to be on the verge of shutting down because they can't service their debt at these interest rate's. Theres a similar story at the largest real estate developer, DLF.
The underlying belief is that purging bad loans, by making them unaffordable for the borrower, will help to make growth more sustainable in the long run. It is an extremely conservative approach to monetary policy, but not one entirely without merit. The current governor was a U of Chicago professor who was a loud voice predicting impending doom in the pre-crisis years. I think some of the conservatism comes from that experience. Wether he is being too conservative is up for debate, essentially a growth vs long term stability debate. The Chinese have not been as conservative when it comes to the financial sector, what impact that'll will have on their banks is yet to be seen. I wouldn't put it past the Chinese to keep things stable without a hitch, the have a knack for making things work. We haven't displayed that sort of competence, so far.
To your last point, it is one that economists are aware of- it's called 'hysteresis'- the effects of depressed economic activity persist well in to the future. There is someone at every central bank calculating the impact of hysteresis effects on the economy. They'll have an estimate and will have weighed it against other factors. So it's not that they aren't aware of it, they might have assigned too small a weight to the issue of hysteresis, depending on your perspective.