Skip to main content
Unpublished Paper
Negative Nominal Interest Rates: History and Current Proposals
CAWM Discussion Papers No. 43 (2011)
  • Martin Menner
  • Cordelius Ilgmann, University of Muenster
Abstract
Given the renewed interest in negative interest rates as a means for overcoming the zero bound on nominal interest rates, this article reviews the history of negative nominal interest rates and gives a brief survey over the current proposals that received popular attention in the wake of the financial crisis of 2007/08. It is demonstrated that ‘taxing money’ proposals have a long intellectual history and that instead of being the conjecture of a monetary crank, they are a serious policy proposal. In a second step the article points out that, besides the more popular debate on a Gesell tax as a means to remove the zero bound on nominal interest rates, there is a class of neoclassical search-models that advocates a negative tax on money as efficiency enhancing. This strand of the literature has so far been largely ignored by the policy debate on negative interest rates.
Keywords
  • negative interest rates,
  • history of economic thought,
  • Silvio Gesell,
  • zero bound,
  • search-theoretical models,
  • monetary policy
Publication Date
January, 2011
Citation Information
Martin Menner and Cordelius Ilgmann. "Negative Nominal Interest Rates: History and Current Proposals" CAWM Discussion Papers No. 43 (2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/mmenner/10/