
Understanding the real‑world effects of negative policy rates informs central banks about viable tools beyond conventional cuts, especially when the zero lower bound constrains stimulus. The findings shape future monetary‑policy design in advanced economies facing low‑growth environments.
When the Great Recession forced the U.S. Federal Reserve to the brink of the zero lower bound, policymakers turned to unconventional tools such as quantitative easing and forward guidance. European central banks, however, chose a more radical path by setting policy rates slightly below zero. This divergence created a natural experiment that allows economists to isolate the impact of negative rates on credit markets, deposit behavior, and overall macroeconomic activity. By breaking the traditional floor on safe‑asset yields, these banks aimed to transmit lower financing costs throughout the economy, especially to businesses that rely heavily on bank funding.
A recent paper by McLeay, Tenreyro, and von dem Berge synthesizes several years of data across the euro area, Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark and Japan. Their analysis confirms three core observations: first, corporate deposit and wholesale funding rates can indeed fall below zero, while household deposit rates remain bounded by the zero lower bound; second, the pass‑through to loan rates is positive but imperfect, averaging more than 50% in the euro zone but varying elsewhere; third, aggregate banking profitability does not deteriorate as feared—in many cases, macro‑economic gains offset narrower interest margins. These findings challenge the conventional wisdom that negative rates inevitably erode bank balance sheets.
For policymakers, the evidence suggests that modestly negative policy rates are a viable addition to the monetary‑toolkit when conventional cuts are exhausted. They can stimulate lending without destabilizing the banking sector, provided the negative stance is limited in depth and duration. Nonetheless, the mixed pass‑through to consumer deposits and the ongoing debate over deeper negative rates underscore the need for careful calibration. As advanced economies confront persistently low inflation and sluggish growth, the nuanced lessons from Europe’s experiment will likely influence future decisions on whether to revisit or expand the use of negative interest rates.
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