RichInSpirit
Registered User
- Messages
- 1,207
Its time to cut out the middleman now. I don't get why I need to re-pay a higher interest rate to a commercial bank when the ECB is lending at rates a lot lower.
If the ECB were to start taking on millions of customers, hiring tens of thousands of staff to support them and opening thousands of branches, do you thing their rates might need to rise to cover those costs?
Everyone and every business can compete on a level playing field insofar as banking transactions go.
So you nationalise it to EU and remove competition. We all know the EU is a lean mean efficient machine...
So if the ECB reject your loan application you can't go anywhere else.??? If the ECB sets interest rates at say 2%, why do hanker for other entities competing against each other but ultimately charging you more than 2%?
Surely if 2% is the best rate, then you would choose 2% over a 3% rate offered by a commercial bank?
why do hanker for other entities competing against each other but ultimately charging you more than 2%?
I can't see a long-term future for the commercial banks. Their present existence is highly questionable even now. They are all licensed by the Irish Central Bank, a member of the ECB that lends money to governments for next to zero.
Its time to cut out the middleman now. I don't get why I need to re-pay a higher interest rate to a commercial bank when the ECB is lending at rates a lot lower. The only reasoning is by virtue of the commercial bank being in the privileged position of having a license.
Its all sounding very archaic to me.
So if the ECB reject your loan application you can't go anywhere else.
The other entities absorb the considerable overhead of operating branch networks with all associated staff and a large degree of the risk. The beauty of the multiples entities competing is that it drives efficiency and ultimately better value to the consumer.
If the ECB were the only game in town, who's to say we wouldn't be paying 10%?
The ECB does not lend to Govts.
It never has, it doesn't, and it legally can't.
The ECB lends to commercial banks.
You are calling for retailers to be abolished, and for the main wholesaler to sell direct to customers.
The Irish banks have lower credit ratings than the Irish state. Ireland's credit rating is currently high with a stable or positive outlook https://tradingeconomics.com/ireland/rating. The Irish pillar banks have lower credit ratings. Here's BoI as an example https://investorrelations.bankofireland.com/debt-investors/credit-ratings/. Basically, they are adequate with stable outlook.There is an increasing risk that Irish banks could go under. Certainly a bigger risk than the state going under.
While the ratings may be lower they still indicate the banks have the ability to meet their financial obligations, and they are now independently supervised by the ECB and not by a 'light touch' CBI. So if you are saving an amount (per covered institution) lower than the 100,000 EUR level guaranteed by the DGS, and you can get a better post-tax return doing so with the banks than with state savings, why would not not choose the bank(s)?So, if people do have concerns, they would be better off putting their deposits in state savings schemes.
There is an increasing risk that Irish banks could go under.
Im not sure, but a transfer of ownership would be more efficient. The branches and staff are already in place, just change the legal entity from Bank of Whatever to ECB and hey presto! no more 'commercial' banks charging interest rates over and above the prevailing rates of ECB. Everyone and every business can compete on a level playing field insofar as banking transactions go.
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