Crowding Out (Economics)

In economics, crowding out occurs when the government is borrowing heavily while businesses and individuals also would like to borrow. The government can always pay the market interest rate, but the private sector cannot, and is therefore crowded out. The state is in other words borrowing so much that interest rates increase, which in effect squeezes the private sector out of the credit markets. Crowding out can also come from state spending on areas that might be provided more efficiently by the private sector, such as health care, or even through charity and redistribution. At times, excessive government borrowing has caused low private sector borrowing and, consequently, low investment and (because the economic returns on public borrowing are typically lower than those on private debt, especially corporate debt) slower economic growth. This has become less of a concern in recent years as government indebtedness has declined and, because of globalization, companies have become more able to raise capital outside their home country.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
vangie tang
temp
derryn hinch
list of polish language authors
david garst
peggy sue
sheba medical center
per kristian foss
marvel uk
the scourge (warcraft)
rune (computer game)
list of picasso artworks 1931 1940
list of city locations
division of hinkler
martin jol
oeiras
rommel, desert fox
william sidney smith
mt. hyjal
division of kennedy
monkey points
karlsruher virtueller katalog
software localization
hot isostatic pressing
public theater
crowding out (biology)
ludwig rellstab
blindern
pastorita huaracina
william farrar smith
sophus bugge
john caffrey
film de guerre
joginder jaswant singh
schwelm
arthur numan
whistle stop train tour
battle of emmaus
fort pitt (pennsylvania)
umbrella brand
marduk (band)
jessica rydill
hugh cairns (surgeon)
john vaughan campbell