Sunday Times

Copenhagen coping well financiall­y

- Bloomberg

AFTER almost five years of negative interest rates, Danish households are richer than ever.

With more cash than they know what to do with, households are stuffing their banks full of deposits. The upshot is that the country with the world record in negative rates now also boasts a record in bank savings.

Central bank data show bank deposits in Denmark rose to 812.3billion kroner (about R1.5-trillion) in December, which Nykredit estimates is the highest level since such a statistic was first compiled 16 years ago. It’s also a record when the numbers are adjusted for inflation and seasonal variations.

Danes had enjoyed an “impressive increase in real wages”, said Tore Stramer, chief economist at Nykredit. Negative rates — the benchmark deposit rate is minus 0.65% — have also coincided with a sustained rise in employment and, crucially, a thriving housing market, he said. What’s more, banks have refrained from passing negative rates on to retail clients.

Stramer estimates that every man, woman, child and baby has the equivalent of R280 000 in a deposit account, if the aggregate figure is averaged out.

“We are seeing such tailwinds to the household sector that Danes can both increase consumptio­n, bring down debt and increase their wealth,” he said.

There are signs that the wealth levels are encouragin­g Danes to start paying down the rich world’s biggest gross debt burden relative to disposable incomes.

For the first time since 2009, the share of homeowners paying down principal on their mortgages now exceeds the share of those with intereston­ly loans. —

 ?? Picture:FRANCIS DEAN ?? DANISH BACON: While many South Africans despair about surviving until payday, Danes are rolling in cash
Picture:FRANCIS DEAN DANISH BACON: While many South Africans despair about surviving until payday, Danes are rolling in cash

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