The interest rate can be regarded as
the cost of money, expressed as a
percentage. If the annual interest rate
is 10 percent, an individual borrowing
$100 for a year pays $10 interest.Decimalized currency systems substantially
facilitated the calculation of
interest. This is one reason countries
rapidly adopted decimalized currency
systems during the 19th century.
Theoretically, interest rates adjust to
a level at which the interest earned on
$100 invested in financial assets (for
example, corporate bonds) equals the
income earned from the ownership of a
$100 worth of capital goods (for example,
tools, machinery, buildings). During
the recovery phase of the business
cycle, interest rates tend to rise as capital
goods become more productive,
and in the recession phase, interest
rates tend to fall as capital goods lose
productivity.
During early European history, religious
authorities regarded charging interest
as a sinful means of earning income.
Governments either banned interest or
put a legal ceiling on interest rates. In the
United States, state usury laws limiting
interest rates were common as late as the
1970s. Most of them have now been
repealed.
Historically, the highest peaks in
interest rates have occurred during
wartime. Interest rates reached historic
levels during the Napoleonic Wars and
during World War I. Wars are often the
occasion for heavy government borrowing
and high inflation, both of which are
enemies to low interest rates. The legacy
of the Depression and wage and price
controls helped keep a lid on interest
rates during World War II, but the era of
the Cold War, from 1946 to 1983, saw
the longest upswing in interest rates
since the beginning of the 18th century.
Governments may act purposely to
reduce interest rates as an antidote to
depression. In 1998, the Federal Reserve
System in the United States acted to lower
interest rates to prevent a global financial
crisis from spreading to the United States.
Again in 2008, the Federal Reserve
pushed its benchmark interest rate from
5.25 percent to almost zero (Hilsenrath
and Evans, January 7, 2009) That is the
lowest interest rate on record for the federal
funds rate.