Low interest rates will ease Brazil's primary deficit

Headline BRAZIL: Low interest rates will ease primary deficit

Significance With an election due soon, the governing Liberal-National Coalition’s pledge to ring-fence the defence spending commitments made in 2016 was under some pressure. However, defence spending in fiscal year 2021/22 will grow by over 4% in real terms and stay above the symbolic level of 2% of GDP. Impacts Growing popular and bipartisan concern with Chinese aggression is a conducive environment for increased defence spending. Low interest rates and a stronger Australian dollar are also supporting sustained levels of defence expenditure. Washington may increase pressure on Australia to conduct freedom of navigation exercises in the South China Sea. Major business groups are concerned that increased criticism of China in national politics will produce yet more punitive backlash.


2020 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Olli-Pekka Hilmola ◽  
Weidong Li ◽  
Andres Tolli

PurposeFor decades, it was emphasized that manufacturing and trading companies should aim to be lean with very small inventories. However, in the recent decade, time-significant change has taken place as nearly all of the “old west” countries have now low interest rates. Holding inventories have been beneficial for the sake of customer service and for achieving savings in transportation and fixed ordering costs.Design/methodology/approachIn this study, inventory management change is examined in publicly traded manufacturing and trade companies of Finland and three Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania) during the years 2010–2018.FindingsInventory efficiency has been leveled off or falling in these countries and mostly declining development has concerned small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). It is also found that inventory efficiency is in general lower in SMEs than in larger companies. Two companies sustaining in inventory efficiency are used as an example that lean has still significance, and higher inventories as well as lower inventory efficiency should not be the objective. Two companies show exemplary financial performance as well as shareholder value creation.Research limitations/implicationsWork concerns only four smaller countries, and this limits its generalization power. Research is one illustration what happens to private sector companies under low interest rate policies.Practical implicationsContinuous improvement of inventory efficiency becomes questionable in the light of current research and the low interest rate environment.Originality/valueThis is one of the seminal studies from inventory efficiency as the global financial crisis taken place in 2008–2009 and there is the implementation of low interest rates.


2018 ◽  
Vol 78 (4) ◽  
pp. 396-411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wendong Zhang ◽  
Kristine Tidgren

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine the current farm economic downturn and credit restructuring by comparing it with the 1920s and 1980s farm crises from both economic and regulatory perspectives. Design/methodology/approach This paper closely compares critical economic and regulatory aspects of the current farm downturn with two previous farm crises in the 1920s and 1980s, and equally importantly, the golden eras that occurred before them. This study compares key aggregate statistics in land value, agricultural credit, lending regulations, and also evaluates the situations and impacts on individual farmer households by using three representative case studies. Findings The authors argue that there are at least three economic and regulatory reasons why the current farm downturn is unlikely to slide into a sudden collapse of the agricultural markets: strong, real income; growth in the 2000s, historically low interest rates; and more prudent agricultural lending practices. The current farm downturn is more likely a liquidity and working capital problem, as opposed to a solvency and balance sheet problem for the overall agricultural sector. The authors argue that the trajectory of the current farm downturn will likely be a gradual, drawn-out one like that of the 1920s farm crisis, as opposed to a sudden collapse as in the 1980s farm crisis. Originality/value The review provides empirical evidence for cautious optimism of the future trajectory of the current downturn, and argues that the current downturn is much more similar to the 1920s pattern than the 1980s crisis.


Subject Impact of the oil price drop on energy high-yield bonds. Significance The over 50% oil price drop since June 2014 is hitting bonds issued by energy companies, particularly those issued by sub-investment grade corporates. The US high-yield bond market has been growing rapidly over the past five years. The shale boom has generated considerable investment, mainly funded through the issuance of these bonds which benefit from historically low interest rates. As the oil price has plunged, the spread over Treasury yields paid by the average issuer in the energy subsector has more than doubled between July and the December 2014 peak. Impacts Yields currently offered by the energy subsector are not far from pricing in a default scenario. Persistently low oil prices will further darken the outlook for the energy subsector and the high-yield market generally. A possible default cycle in the energy sector could accelerate outflows, overstretching the sector further.


Subject Trends in the securitisation market. Significance Investment in securitised assets fell after the financial crisis due to the role played by mortgage-backed securities as well as investor concerns about sparse data and complexity. The search for yield in a world of low interest rates has drawn investors back to securitised investment, particularly in aircraft-backed securities and rental property portfolios. Specific investor concerns have been dealt with, raising confidence, and the sector is meeting the financing shortfall arising from the pressure that traditional lenders have been under since the crisis. Impacts US-based securitisations are likely to become more available to European institutional investors if, as expected, regulation increases. The new US administration is expected to bring in measures to improve the business climate and may reduce regulation. The uptake of aircraft-backed securities will increase, but regulatory bias means that demand will still be dominated by pension funds.


Subject Economic backdrop to the election cycle. Significance Incumbent administrations will be helped in this year's local, regional and national elections by a number of factors that will contribute to economic growth: lower energy prices, low interest rates, easier bank lending, income tax reforms, a stabilisation in house prices and the stimulus to exports of a weak euro. Nevertheless, widespread disillusion with the political system is likely to result in significant changes in the political landscape, with repercussions for the direction of policy both within Spain and at the European level. Impacts A coalition of the left would push for an easing of austerity measures and more public spending paid for by more progressive taxation. It is also likely to be supportive of a move towards a federal state. Domestic demand should rise, unemployment continue to fall and property prices to stabilise and start to move upwards in some locations. Challenging political and economic conditions will make it difficult to sustain fragile coalitions.


Significance The lifting of export taxes and the recession have already undermined the government's goal of reducing the fiscal deficit: in 2016 the primary deficit-to-GDP ratio will be even higher than in 2015. However, low public debt-to-GDP ratios and a favourable global environment allowed the government to finance the deficit with new debt. Provinces have also actively tapped global capital markets, postponing fiscal adjustment. Impacts Rising global interest rates would force the government to accelerate unpopular fiscal adjustment. Even if global financial conditions do not worsen, lack of fiscal adjustment will eventually raise doubts about debt sustainability. The government's ability to enforce fiscal rules for provinces will depend on its performance in the 2017 mid-term elections.


Subject Germany’s pension system. Significance The pension system is under increasing pressure from demographic change, low interest rates and generous government policies. Impacts Increasing tax liabilities on pension incomes could increase the prevalence of old-age poverty. Rising pension liabilities in the occupational pension pillar could dampen business investment in years ahead. The question of pension reform could be the undoing of the government when the coalition parties meet to evaluate their work in late 2019.


Subject Economic outlook for Switzerland. Significance Switzerland’s GDP growth disappointed in the first quarter of 2017: it increased by 0.3% on a quarterly and 1.1% on a yearly basis, held back by weak private consumption growth. However, exports rebounded after the long blight of the 2015 franc appreciation shock. Impacts Private consumption should improve after stagnating in 2015-16, benefiting from the labour market recovery. Low interest rates are likely to boost private investment. Chemicals, pharmaceuticals, engineering, electrics and the watch-making industry are likely to benefit from the expected revival in exports. Inflation is likely to average around 0.4% in 2017 and 2018.


Subject Global debt risks. Significance Global indebtedness is slowly declining -- down to 234% of GDP in 2018, after rising from 202% of GDP in 2008 to peak at 245% of GDP in 2017. The drop is consistent across the household, corporate and government sectors in both advanced and emerging economies. Ultra-low interest rates and abundant liquidity provided by unconventional monetary policies drove the increase in advanced economies. Expansionary domestic policies, subdued inflation and liquidity from advanced economies searching for yield encouraged emerging economies' indebtedness. Impacts Research shows that only 33% of credit booms end in crisis, but deleveraging in most major economies will nonetheless dampen growth. High-risk structured financial products and lending by ‘shadow’ non-bank channels has surged, raising the risk of panic in a downturn. Global average household debt is moderate, but pockets of risk include nations with booming property prices or student loan markets. In low-to-lower-mid-income emerging nations, exchange rate risk is very high as 80% of cross-border loans are dollar-denominated. Fears about China risk masking other nations; debt-to-GDP in other emerging economies is growing faster than advanced nations' debts.


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