Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Klaas Knot presenting the DNB's annual report, 14 March 2024
Klaas Knot presenting the DNB's annual report, 14 March 2024 - Credit: DNB / DNB - License: All Rights Reserved
Business
Klaas Knot
DNB
De Nederlandsche Bank
FNV
inflation
interest rate
wage costs
4-day work week
wage increase
service economy
Wednesday, 25 September 2024 - 09:06

Share this article:

DNB boss expects lower interest rates, critical of union's demand for shorter work week

Klaas Knot, the president of De Nederlandsche Bank, expects that the European Central Bank will continue to lower interest rates but that inflation in the Netherlands will remain higher than the EU average for a time yet. He also thinks that trade union FNV’s plan for a shorter work week is “exactly the wrong measure at this time,” Knot told Nieuwsuur.

The European interest rate will fall below 3 percent in the coming years, Knot expects. The ECB recently lowered the deposit interest rate from 3.75 to 3.5 percent. “I expect that we will gradually take our foot off the brake in the first half of 2025 by further lowering the interest rate,” Knot told the current affairs program. "I do not expect interest rates to return to the extremely low levels we saw before the pandemic, but to a more natural level." He expects them to land “somewhere starting with a two.”

The high interest rate in recent years is due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. That kicked off the energy crisis and sparked high inflation in Europe. The ECB increased the interest rates to 4 percent, attempting to cool the economy and bring prices under control by making it more difficult to borrow money. But since inflation has been falling toward the target of 2 percent this year, the ECB has slowly been lowering the rates again.

Inflation in the Netherlands was 3.3 percent in August, higher than the European average. “Inflation in the Netherlands is increasingly starting to deviate from the European pattern, and not in a positive way,” Knot said. According to him, that is because the Netherlands is a service economy. “The service sector is very labor-intensive, so inflation is mainly determined by wage costs.”

The labor market remains tight, and wages continue to rise. Trade union FNV is demanding a 7 percent wage increase for next year, Knot pointed out. “If wages do indeed increase by 7 percent, that will add a full percentage point to inflation in 2026. That means that your and my shopping basket will continue to rise in price for even longer. The parties at the collective labor agreement table must take that into account.”

He also said that FNV’s plan to push for a 32-hour working week in collective agreements is “exactly the wrong measure at this time” because it will only further increase the labor shortage. “People who work should be encouraged to work more hours,” he said.

More like this

Image
Grocery shopping
Dutch central bank blames pay raises for continued high inflation last year
Image
Euros in a wallet
Trade unions still pushing for high increases in wage negotiations
Image
Man putting a coin into a piggy bank
Netherlands residents had over 616 billion euros in savings last year, a new record
Image
Kalverstraat, Amsterdam's famous shopping street
Dutch economic growth will pick up in coming years, inflation to stay higher than EU
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Oranje thrash Sweden 5-1 to move to brink of World Cup knockout stage
  • Amsterdam-Oost neighborhood rocked by loud explosion Saturday afternoon
  • Most Dutch municipalities back asylum distribution law but resist implementation
  • Dutch government weighs cuts to infrastructure spending amid multibillion-euro shortfall
  • Drag queen attacked again in Amsterdam

Top stories

  • Oranje thrash Sweden 5-1 to move to brink of World Cup knockout stage
  • Amsterdam-Oost neighborhood rocked by loud explosion Saturday afternoon
  • Netherlands records second official heat wave of 2026 on Saturday as Ell hits 30.1°C
  • Police release photos, ask for help identifying man who assaulted two women in Utrecht
  • Hundreds of venues prepare to host fans for Netherlands vs Sweden World Cup match

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content