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  1. Reports 2015/27 Welfare effects of a corporate tax rate reduction in Norway Published

  2. . Households' interest burden is closely related to the interest rate level. Norges Bank lowered the policy rate to zero in May 2020 and interest rates on loans in banks and mortgage companies have followed suit

  3. . Simulations on the main model with endogenous exchange rate, interest rate and immigration in addition to a long run financial accelerator in the household sector, show that the multiplier for GDP

  4. . Finally, the effects on the Norwegian economy of the fall in interest rates in the period 2011–2018 are analysed

  5. . Interest rates influence housing prices indirectly through the credit channel. Furthermore, households

  6. . One reason for this result is an expected lowering of interest rates and a depreciation of the currency that will lead to an increase in non-oil exports

  7. . Low international interest rates and a strong krone have contributed to a low interest rates in Norway, where they are roughly expected to stay up to next summer, when they are expected to gradually increase

  8. comprehensive set of regulations, while by the end of the 1980s quantitative regulations, interest rate controls and foreign

  9. . Choice of net rate of interest (difference between the nominal rate and average wage growth used in indexation of entitlements

  10. . Lower interest rates, more expansionary fiscal policy, decreasing drop in demand from the petroleum industry and not least slightly increasing growth in Norwegian export markets, are other factors

  11. ), and changes in interest rates and exchange rates. We have previously used similar analyses to analyze the ring effects of the petroleum industry, see, for example, Brasch, Hungnes, and Strøm (2019

  12. . Low interest rates will still have positive effects on the domestic demand. From next year the fiscal policy is expected to give some stronger impulses

  13. . With relatively low interest rates and rising real income growth, the increase in household consumption is projected to stay high during the next few years

  14. . With continued relatively low interest rates and positive real income growth, the increase in household consumption is projected to stay high both in the current and next year

  15. . Malawi, and most developing countries, is characterized by immature financial institutions, making it difficult to model the link between the exchange rate, interest rates and capital mobility