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BPEA | 1983 No. 2

Why Have Short-Term Interest Rates Been So High?

Benjamin M. Friedman and
BMF
Benjamin M. Friedman Harvard University
Richard H. Clarida
RHC
Richard H. Clarida Yale University
Discussants: Jeffrey R. Shafer
JRS
Jeffrey R. Shafer

1983, No. 2


THE most visible and persistent feature of the U.S. financial markets thus far during the 1980s has been high interest rates. Observed nominal interest rates on most instruments traded in the U.S. debt markets have set record highs twice since 1980. Perhaps more important, “real” interest rates, in the sense of observed nominal rates less a presumed expectation of future price inflation, have been unprecedentedly high as well. During the past few years nominal interest rates first rose to levels far above the prevailing inflation rate, and more recently the decline in nominal interest rates has lagged well behind the slackening pace of inflation. Especially for instruments of short maturity, for which inferences about expectations of inflation in the distant future are not necessary, these high nominal interest rates have clearly corresponded to high real rates as well.

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