Why have Real Interest Rates not Come Down?

Sep 12th 2001, Jayati Ghosh

One of the favourite predictions of the proponents of financial liberalisation measures in the 1990s was that the eventual result of such reforms would be reductions in real interest rates. It was argued that there would be an initial rise in such rates to redress the excessively low interest rates created by policies of "financial repression". In fact this was argued to be both necessary and welcome because it was supposed to lead to higher rates of domestic saving as well.
 
But thereafter the greater access to capital, especially from international markets, was supposed to imply that Indian entrepreneurs would face lower real rates of interest. This in turn would obviously act as a spur to investment. Thus financial liberalisation was seen as a means of generating lower real interest rates and higher real investment rates.
 
But it turns out that this has not happened. Investment and savings rates have not increased significantly over the 1990s, nor have real rates of interest gone down over the course of the decade. Nominal interest rates have fallen, but real interest rates have shown no such tendency and have in fact risen quite sharply from the middle of the decade, to levels well in excess of 8 per cent. This is clear from Table 1, which shows the movement the State Bank of India's Advance Rate. The real interest rate is that minus the rate of change in the Wholesale Price Index. (The other nominal interest rates facing entrepreneurs, such as the term lending rates of the non-bank financial institutions, tend to be substantially higher.)

Table 1 : Nominal and real rates of interest


Nominal and real interest rates
 

 

SBI adv rate

Real rate

1990-91

16.5

6.2

1991-92

16.5

2.8

1992-93

19

8.9

1993-94

19

10.7

1994-95

15

2.5

1995-96

16.5

8.4

1996-97

14.5

10

1997-98

14

9.6

1998-99

14

8.1

1999-00

12

8.7

Clearly, this is something which requires explanation. Even if the very optimistic argument of the liberalisers concerning the effect of capital inflows on domestic real interest rates were not accepted, there would still have been some expectation that access to more forms of capital would have meant some decline in real interest rates for domestic investors. The apparent imperviousness of real interest rates to any such pressure therefore deserves much closer consideration.
 
One of the arguments that has recently gained a lot of attention, and is increasingly cited by a number of proponents of the financial sector reforms, relates to the fact that small savings by households constitute an important part of the overall savings in the economy. According to this argument, the Government, in order to attract small savings in the form of Public Provident Fund, Post Office deposits, National Savings Schemes and other such schemes to finance its own expenditure, has kept interest rates on such schemes relatively high.

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