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MONEY

Norwegian consumers urged to negotiate better interest rates 

Banks in Norway have earned record-high sums from increased interest rates. Norway's Consumer Council and Minister of Finance, Trygve Slagsvold Vedum, have encouraged customers to seek better deals. 

Pictured is a close up shot of a person inputting their pin on a ATM.
Bank customers have been told to renegotiate their deals to get better rates. Pictured is a close up shot of a person inputting their pin on a ATM.Photo by Eduardo Soares on Unsplash

Norwegian banks made 62.4 billion kroner more on interest on loans and mortgages than was paid out to savers and account holders in the form of interest in the first half of this year, according to figures from national stats agency Statistics Norway. 

This is the highest difference between interest earned and interest paid out since records began in 2010, according to Statistics Norway. 

“This is where the banks essentially make their money. By offering customers low deposit interest rates, the arrows will point upwards,” Inger Lise Blyverket, director of the Consumer Council, told Norwegian newswire NTB. 

Banks have already been in hot water with consumer rights watchdogs for being too slow to raise the interest paid to savers. 

Blyverket has said customers should try and renegotiate with banks. They can do so by asking for a lower interest on any money owed to the bank or a higher interest rate on any savings accounts they have. 

In the event that the bank proves unwilling to negotiate, consumers are advised to switch providers. 

“If the bank is on the back foot, you just go to www.finansportalen.no and find yourself a new one. Here, with a few keystrokes, you can switch banks or ask your current bank to match the offer,” she explained. 

Norway’s Minister of Finance has encouraged consumers to contact their bank and ask for a better deal. He added that banks have a responsibility too. 

“There is no reason for the banks to have extra profits because of this troubled time, so they have a responsibility,” he told Norwegian broadcaster TV 2. 

The minister said the government would ask banks to be fair and responsible when it comes to interest applied to both savings and loans. 

However, he said that he could not directly intervene in the matter. 

“I want to apply some pressure, but I don’t have the right to control. One can misunderstand and think that the finance minister steps in and manages, and I don’t have the power to do that. That’s the way it should be because we have free banks in Norway,” Vedum said. 

Knut Anton Mork, a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, told NTB that the current situation is normal and that banks had kept high savings rates in relation to interest rates – which dropped to zero during the pandemic – in recent years. 

“No one protested that deposit interest rates were not cut below zero. What is happening now is no less reasonable,” the professor said. 

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ECONOMY

What lower inflation in Norway means for you 

Inflation in Norway continues to slow. However, the cost of living in the country isn’t slowing as quickly as economists expected. Here’s what that means to you. 

What lower inflation in Norway means for you 

Inflation is slowing 

Norway’s Consumer Price Index, CPI, which measures changes in prices for household goods and services, has slowed yet again. 

Between April last year and the same month this year, prices in Norway rose by 3.6 percent. It marks the third time that price increases have been below four percent since the start of 2022. 

The figures, released by Norway’s national data agency Statistics Norway, mark the fourth month in a row where the 12 monthly inflation figure has been lower than the yearly figure from the month before. This means prices are rising less rapidly than before. 

“Price growth decreased for the fourth month in a row in April. Prices are still higher than they were at the same time last year for most goods and services, but they are generally rising more slowly than before,” Espen Kristiansen at Statistics Norway said. 

Food remains one of the biggest contributors to inflation 

The price of food and non-alcoholic beverages rose by 3.3 percent from March to April, according to Statistics Norway. 

Chocolate, soft drinks, coffee, and citrus foods saw the biggest price increases, which the national data agency called “unusual.” 

What wasn’t unusual, however, was the cost of food rising following Easter, when many supermarkets ran offers to compete for customers. 

“The rise must be seen in the context of the fact that large offer campaigns in connection with Easter dampened prices in March,” Kristiansen said. 

The figures for April show that food prices in Norway have increased by 6.8 percent compared to a year ago. 

The rising cost of food and drink in Norway could potentially outgrow wages this year, even if expected pay bumps will outpace forecasted inflation overall. 

Economists expected inflation to fall more 

Inflation hasn’t eased as much as some experts were expecting. Core inflation, which excludes energy prices and taxes, was measured at 4.4 percent year on year in April. This is above what economists surveyed by the newswire Reuters expected. 

Norges Bank, the country’s central bank, raised the policy rate to a 16-year high of 4.5 percent in December. The bank has said that inflation should generally be around two percent, so it has used interest rates to curb price increases. 

As inflation isn’t falling much quicker than expected, economists predict that the central bank may wait until December before slashing rates – which for consumers means that loan and mortgage repayments will remain high for the foreseeable future. 

“The fall in inflation has not been much greater than Norges Bank has thought. This, therefore, indicates that an interest rate cut may come in December instead of September,” Kjersti Haugland, chief economist at DNB Markets, told public broadcaster NRK

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