News Australia's Election: "Man of Steel" and Interest Rates

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The upcoming Australian election in October has prompted discussions about the implications of interest rates, particularly in light of Prime Minister John Howard's slogan "Keeping interest rates low." The conversation centers on whether high interest rates are entirely negative or if they can have beneficial aspects. Some argue that low interest rates stimulate economic growth by encouraging consumer spending through credit, while also acknowledging the risks of increased debt and inflation. The discussion references former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's approach to managing interest rates to stabilize the economy, highlighting the complexity of economic forecasting and the challenges in predicting market corrections. Overall, the debate underscores concerns about political narratives surrounding interest rates and their potential impact on voters' perceptions of economic stability.
Claude Bile
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We are about to have an election here in Australia sometime shortly, in October, and the current Prime Minister, the incumbent John Howard (a.k.a Man of Steel), has adopted the slogan 'Keeping interest rates low'.

Are high interest rates a wholly bad thing, or are there upsides to having high interest rates?

My thought is that Howard is running a scare campaign, trying to frighten people into beleiving that if Labor get elected, then interest rates are going to suddenly skyrocket to 18% and everyone will be poor.

Feel free to enlighten me.

Claude.
 
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Lower interest rates help stimulate the economy by encouraging people to buy on credit. There are two catches: going into debt and a too-good ecomomy causing a rise in inflation.

IMO, Greenspan has played it just right: he uses interest rates to help moderate the economic cycle. Its the reason he's been in his job through both Democratic and Republican Presidents and the reason (imo) that he has a larger influence over the economy than the President does.
 
He may have kept his job, but Greenspan's understanding of the economy seems about as bad as anyone else's much of the time. Remember a few years back when he was worried we'd pay the national debt off too quickly, and did not forsee any serious correction due in the stock market?
 
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