Current:Home > ScamsInterest rates up, but not on your savings account-LoTradeCoin
Interest rates up, but not on your savings account
View Date:2024-12-23 19:25:09
When the Fed hikes interest rates, as it's been doing to bring down inflation, borrowing—like mortgages and loans—gets more expensive˛ And higher rates should mean savers are earning more interest on their bank accounts.
But lately, consumers are getting left in the dust. As the Fed pushes interest rates higher, savings deposit rates are hovering effectively near zero. Today, we talk with an economist and the CEO of a community bank about why that's the case, and what it would take for that to change.
Music by Drop Electric. Find us: Twitter / Facebook / Newsletter.
Subscribe to our show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, PocketCasts and NPR One.
For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.
veryGood! (31)
Related
- Darren Criss on why playing a robot in 'Maybe Happy Ending' makes him want to cry
- EPA proposes a fee aimed at reducing climate-warming methane emissions
- Lawmakers may look at ditching Louisiana’s unusual ‘jungle primary’ system for a partisan one
- The FAA is tightening oversight of Boeing and will audit production of the 737 Max 9
- Taylor Swift Becomes Auntie Tay In Sweet Photo With Fellow Chiefs WAG Chariah Gordon's Daughter
- Are We Having Fun Yet? The Serious Business Of Having Fun
- House GOP moving forward with Hunter Biden contempt vote next week
- Demi Moore Shares Favorite Part of Being Grandma to Rumer Willis' Daughter Louetta
- Wicked's Ethan Slater Shares How Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo Set the Tone on Set
- Florida school district pulls dictionaries and encyclopedias as part of inappropriate content review
Ranking
- PSA: Coach Outlet Has Stocking Stuffers, Gifts Under $100 & More for the Holidays RN (up to 60% Off)
- Elmore Nickleberry, a Memphis sanitation worker who marched with Martin Luther King, has died at 92
- Oregon Supreme Court declines for now to review challenge to Trump's eligibility for ballot
- Tearful Russian billionaire who spent $2 billion on art tells jurors Sotheby’s cheated him
- Brands Our Editors Are Thankful For in 2024
- North Carolina Gov. Cooper gets temporary legal win in fight with legislature over board’s makeup
- Supreme Court agrees to hear Starbucks appeal in Memphis union case
- Democratic lawmakers in New Mexico take aim at gun violence, panhandling, retail crime and hazing
Recommendation
-
Hurricane forecasters on alert: November storm could head for Florida
-
West Virginia Senate OKs bill to allow veterans, retired police to provide armed security in schools
-
Austin ordered strikes from hospital where he continues to get prostate cancer care, Pentagon says
-
Texas is blocking US border agents from patrols, Biden administration tells Supreme Court
-
Anti-abortion advocates press Trump for more restrictions as abortion pill sales spike
-
Sushi restaurants are thriving in Ukraine, bringing jobs and a 'slice of normal life'
-
The avalanche risk is high in much of the western US. Here’s what you need to know to stay safe
-
A healing Psalm: After car wreck took 3 kids, surrogacy allowed her to become a mom again.