Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/mathematics/1424426-demand-for-bonds
https://studentshare.org/mathematics/1424426-demand-for-bonds.
iii) Expected future interest rate and bond prices: If the expected interest rate is high, then the expected future price of bonds is low. Thus there will be a windfall loss if bonds are purchased. Thus, bond demand will be low. This also implies that if expected future bond prices are high, then the demand for bonds will rise and vice-versa.
Before commenting on the report it will be useful to note that as mentioned above bond demands (and thus investment) are induced by business cycle booms and dissuaded during recessions. However, during booms since the threat of inflation looms large, it is a natural counteracting force to the possibility of overinvestment. Similarly, during recessions, the adverse effect on the demand for bonds can be countered by the threat of deflation. Now, let's turn to the report.
The first and foremost point to note in this context is the date of the report. It is dated November 2008. Thus the US, UK, and German economies were in a recession, arguably the worst one since the great depression (This was during the heart of the global financial crisis). Thus, one should expect expansionary monetary policies during this time. Lower interest rates ideally stimulated investment demand and thus increase the effective demand which leads to an expansion in real aggregate output with a multiplier effect and thus employment as well. What is reported seems to be along the same lines of intention.
The current yields on US Treasury notes fell to a level that was a precedent in 50 years. Similarly, there was a decline in long-term yields in the UK economy (gilt) and Germany (bond yields).
However, for this policy to work, the falling bond yields have to be coupled with expected deflation. This is so because the lower the expectation regarding future inflation, the higher the interest rates. This implies a future fall in interest rates and thus a raise in the future price of bonds. Thus bond demands will increase because people would intend to cash in on this potential capital gain. This policy failed in Japan in the 1990s since there was a rise in future expected inflation and thus people chose not to invest in bonds. As a result, the intended effect was not engendered.
Thus the report notes that for the expansionary policies that have implied the reduction in government securities to be successful, the threat of a future deflation has to hold strong. That will curb the adverse impact of the recessionary pressure on demand for bonds. The hope is that since the threat of deflation is being taken more seriously, it is quite possible that demand for bonds and thus investments can be stimulated which might provide a much-needed boost to aggregate planned expenditures.
Read More