Reserve Bank Picks Taxpayer’s Pockets To Boost Commercial Bank Profits
The Reserve Bank is digging deeper into taxpayers pockets
to increase the profits of investors and commercial bank
shareholders with today's lifting of the Official Cash
Rate.
That OCR rise will see the bank (read taxpayers)
paying the commercial banks 1.5 billion per year in interest
payments on their settlement/reserve accounts.
Those
accounts are where the banks hold money people have
deposited with them while they lend out created money to
borrowers.
Taxpayers will also pay more interest on the
massive amount of borrowing the government has undertaken
over the last couple of years - again transferring wealth
into the hands of the mostly American shareholders of the
Australian based banks.
In addition, by lifting the OCR
the Reserve Bank has allowed the commercial banks to inflict
more pain on businesses and mortgage borrowers with higher
interest rates - again transferring wealth to overseas bank
shareholders.
That triple whammy will put more pressure
on the country's balance of payments as taxpayer money is
shuffled offshore as profits to those shareholders.
That
taxpayer money should have been spent on nurses and doctors,
teachers, getting people out of motels and into houses,
putting food on the tables of starving kids, and making sure
the police have the resources to deal with gang violence and
ram raids.
Instead of copying what other central banks
are doing our central bank could have been innovative and
adapted its Funds For Lending programme to provide money for
the commercial banks at zero interest provided those banks
made a significant cut in lending rates on working capital
for businesses, provided low interest loans to businesses
for new technology to increase productivity, and funded
start-ups to produce much more of what New Zealanders need
right here to reduce the country's reliance on
imports.
Instead it has chosen to put the interests of
overseas investors and bank shareholders ahead of the
interests of the majority of New
Zealanders.