Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?

Abstract The European Central Bank (ECB) reduced its deposit rate into negative territory in June 2014. It has been reduced further in several steps to reach today’s level of −0.5%. Banks are increasingly facing problems investing their deposits without taking great risks and avoiding nominal deprec...

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Main Author: Jens Klose
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Sciendo 2020-05-01
Series:Wirtschaftsdienst
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-020-2658-7
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author Jens Klose
author_facet Jens Klose
author_sort Jens Klose
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The European Central Bank (ECB) reduced its deposit rate into negative territory in June 2014. It has been reduced further in several steps to reach today’s level of −0.5%. Banks are increasingly facing problems investing their deposits without taking great risks and avoiding nominal depreciation. This article shows, however, that the deposit rate has never been the effective lower bound for deposits at the ECB and, moreover, the decision in September 2019 to introduce the tiering programme increased the average deposit rate rather than decreased it as one would have supposed. With this programme, the ECB has relaxed the situation, even though banks in the euro area make different gains.
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institution Kabale University
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spelling doaj-art-73b06e0e54064b5c854bf5af8d3b864e2025-02-02T08:22:41ZdeuSciendoWirtschaftsdienst0043-62751613-978X2020-05-01100537437910.1007/s10273-020-2658-7Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?Jens Klose0FB Wirtschaft | THM Business School, Technische Hochschule MittelhessenAbstract The European Central Bank (ECB) reduced its deposit rate into negative territory in June 2014. It has been reduced further in several steps to reach today’s level of −0.5%. Banks are increasingly facing problems investing their deposits without taking great risks and avoiding nominal depreciation. This article shows, however, that the deposit rate has never been the effective lower bound for deposits at the ECB and, moreover, the decision in September 2019 to introduce the tiering programme increased the average deposit rate rather than decreased it as one would have supposed. With this programme, the ECB has relaxed the situation, even though banks in the euro area make different gains.https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-020-2658-7
spellingShingle Jens Klose
Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?
Wirtschaftsdienst
title Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?
title_full Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?
title_fullStr Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?
title_full_unstemmed Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?
title_short Negative interest rates, excess reserves and tiering of the ECB: How heavily are banks burdened?
title_sort negative interest rates excess reserves and tiering of the ecb how heavily are banks burdened
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10273-020-2658-7
work_keys_str_mv AT jensklose negativeinterestratesexcessreservesandtieringoftheecbhowheavilyarebanksburdened