Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-8kt4b Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-30T19:11:32.577Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Real Interest Rates: Past and Future

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Abstract

Before 1914 long-term price stability was confidently expected in the UK. The typical yield then of 3 per cent per annum on long-term UK government bonds can be compared with the 4 per cent per annum on government index-linked bonds at end-1992. Inflation has made conventional long-term Government bonds riskier, and it is estimated that the real expected yield on these was about 5 per cent per annum at end-1992. Estimates are also provided for years in between, and for expected real returns on equities, and for the US, and these may surprise some. As estimated, expected real long-term UK government conventional bond yields were mostly at or above 4 per cent per annum. As bonds became relatively more risky, the risk premium on equities came down and is currently quite small, so that the cost of equity capital has not risen as has the cost of government conventional bond borrowing. In the absence o f a prolonged world depression, it seems likely that current expected real long-term interest rates will not fall, and could go higher.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1993 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

The Review is pleased to give hospitality to CLARE Group articles, but is not necessarily in agreement with the views expressed; responsibility for these rests with the author. Members of the CLARE Group are M.J. Artis, A.J.C. Britton, W.A. Brown, C.H. Feinstein, C.A.E. Goodhart, J.A. Kay, R.C.O. Matthews, D. Miles, M.H. Miller, P.M. Oppenheimer, M.V. Posner, W.B. Reddaway, J.R. Sargent, M.FG. Scott, Z.A. Silberston, J.H.B. Tew, S. Wadhwani and M. Weale.

References

Barclays de Zoete Wedd Research (1992), The BZW Equity-Gilt Study 1992, London.Google Scholar
Barro, R.J. and Sala i Martin, X. (1990), ‘World real interest rates’, NBER Working Paper No. 3317.Google Scholar
Blanchard, O.J. and Summers, L.H., (1984), ‘Perspectives on high world real interest rates’, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brealey, R.A. and Myers, S.C. (1988), Principles of Corporate Finance, 3rd Edition, McGraw-Hill, New York.Google Scholar
Edelstein, M. (1976), ‘Realized rates of return on UK home and overseas portfolio investment in the age of high imperialism’, Explorations in Economic History, vol. 13.Google Scholar
Feinstein, C.H. (1972), Statistical Tables on National Income, Expenditure and Output of the UK 1855-1965, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Howe, H. and Pigott, C. (1991-92), ‘Determinants of long-term interest rates: an empirical study of several industrial countries’, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Quarterly Review, Winter.Google Scholar
Ibbotson, R.G. and Sinquefield, R.A. (1989), Stocks, Bonds, Bills and Inflation: Historical Returns (1926-1987), The Research Foundation of the Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts, Charlottesville, Virginia.Google Scholar
Kendrick, J.W. (1961), Productivity Trends in the United States, Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Keynes, J.M. (1931), ‘The economic consequences of Mr Churchill’, Essays in Persuasion, Macmillan, London (abbreviated version of three articles for The Evening Standard which appeared in 1925).Google Scholar
King, M.A. and Fullerton, D. (eds), (1984), The Taxation of Income from Capital: A Comparative Study of the United States, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and West Germany, University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, B.R. and Deane, P. (1962), Abstract of British Historical Statistics, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mitchell, B.R. and Jones, H.G. (1971), Second Abstract of British Historical Statistics, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Scott, M.FG. (1987), ‘A note on King and Fullerton's formulae to estimate the taxation of income from capital’, Journal of Public Economics, 34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, M. Fg. (1989), A New View of Economic Growth, Clarendon Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Scott, M. Fg. (1992), ‘The cost of equity capital and the risk premium on equities’, Applied Financial Economics.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wadhwani, S. (1992), ‘Do global stock prices need to fall by 40%?’, Goldman Sachs International Ltd.Google Scholar