dubinamerica
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So the bank gets a 10% return per annum from the state in return for turning a risky loan into a less risky loan.Banks that take part in the scheme would be paid something like 10c a year for every €1 that was "parked" in this way.
Unless the state continues to pay the interest on the capital at the same time as the borrower this is untrue. Interest is rent on money borrowed and is paid at an agreed rate per time period. The fact that the state pays the rent for one time period and the borrower pays for another time period does not mean that the bank is paid twice.Why is the state (i.e. us) paying 10% on a 5% loan? Not only that, but after the loan is reinstated the borrower proceeds to pay interest on the same money again. So that bank gets paid twice for the same money, making in this scenario, 15% on a 5% loan.
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