0 used to describe bonds or other investments that earn a lot of money:
Interestingly, a solution to the original high-interest problem was dollarization of public debt, while the current evidence and research makes one seriously question such a dollarization policy.
The commissioners moved to make up the shortfall by buying high-interest coupons, therefore exacerbating the future capital growth of the capital fund.
The experiment of stabilising the economy by limiting the growth of the money supply, helped by a deflationist, high-interest policy, is palpably not working.
Other things being equal, high-interest rates are more likely to stimulate savings than low-interest rates.
We are not a high-interest rate country at all.
The banks have enjoyed massive windfall profits in a very high-interest-rate regime.
That is because all family income is used to fund high-interest mortgages.
Her home was worth £47,000, and she took out a bond that was described to her as a high-interest bond.