2023-09-12 04:06:51
Margaux Fodéré / Photo credits: RICCARDO MILANI / HANS LUCAS / HANS LUCAS VIA AFP
This is unprecedented in more than 20 years: in the United States, rates for a 30-year home loan have passed the 7% mark. This is a direct consequence of inflation and the FED’s fierce fight once morest rising prices. In France too, rates are skyrocketing. This Thursday, the European Central Bank must announce whether it will continue to tighten its monetary policy. Across the Atlantic, the economic situation is very different. But real estate rates at 7% in France present a scenario which seems, today at least, improbable.
Firstly, the economic situation across the Atlantic is not the same as in Europe, as noted by Christian de Boissieu, vice-president of the Circle of Economists. “We have a European economy which overall is doing less well than the United States. The United States is at full employment, so inflationary pressures may appear, with salary increases. The context of both growth and employment, budgetary policies are not the same. This is the reason why American interest rates are higher than European rates”, analyzes the economist.
Rates of 5.5% possible
Indeed, inflation, still high in the euro zone, might push the European Central Bank to tighten its monetary policy once more: a decision which might raise the level of rates. The ECB must decide on Thursday.
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