A KEY TENET of economic theory is that if the supply of a good doubles, then the price buyers are willing to pay is likely to decline dramatically all things being equal. In the case of government bond markets, huge additional supply will lead invariably to higher yields at least hypothetically. And yet two years into the crisis, and back in the real world, yields are lower because not all things remained equal. Investors risk aversion, interest rate cuts and various unorthodox central bank actions have helped suppress interest rates.
Nevertheless, plenty of experts predict doom and gloom for the fixed income markets and therefore the wider economy. The level of government intervention has been extraordinary, with hundreds of billions spent or committed in various forms of financial support and debt guarantees. Its hardly surprising that concern over the extent to which states can sustain these efforts...