2020
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3520654
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Eight Centuries of Global Real Interest Rates, R-G, and the ‘Suprasecular’ Decline, 1311–2018

Abstract: With recourse to archival, printed primary, and secondary sources, this paper reconstructs global real interest rates on an annual basis going back to the 14th century, covering 78% of advanced economy GDP over time. I show that across successive monetary and fiscal regimes, and a variety of asset classes, real interest rates have not been 'stable', and that since the major monetary upheavals of the late middle ages, a trend decline between 0.6-1.6 basis points per annum has prevailed. A gradual increase in re… Show more

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Cited by 67 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
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“…( 44 ) report that from the 1870s to 2010, except several brief periods, the long-run interest rate was about r o = 2.5%, although it has been lower since 2006 and was lower during the two world war periods, or about r o = 2%. These findings more or less agree with ( 45 ), tracking the long-run interest rate since the early 14th century. In consideration of these results, we calibrate the model for…”
Section: Frequency Of Industrial Revolutionssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…( 44 ) report that from the 1870s to 2010, except several brief periods, the long-run interest rate was about r o = 2.5%, although it has been lower since 2006 and was lower during the two world war periods, or about r o = 2%. These findings more or less agree with ( 45 ), tracking the long-run interest rate since the early 14th century. In consideration of these results, we calibrate the model for…”
Section: Frequency Of Industrial Revolutionssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…For most borrowers, including many sovereigns, the default risk premium is large enough to ensure that the r>g$$ r>g $$ condition is satisfied. I am aware that we have been in a 30‐year episode of extremely low risk‐free real interest rates, and that there is evidence that the world may have experienced eight centuries of ‘suprasecular’ decline in the real rate of interest (see Schmelzing, 2020). I believe that, globally, the low real interest rate era is coming to an end.…”
Section: The Inescapable Fiscal Dimension Of Central Bank Activity Fi...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Schmelzing (2020) shows that the decline in interest rates goes back to much earlier periods. He constructs global real interest rates going back to the 14th century and shows that, since the late middle ages, real interest rates have displayed a trend decline between 0.6-1.6 basis points per year.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%