Answer:
A) yes they would have a higher income
B) depending on the situation
Explanation:
A) With such a "standard" yield curve, Savings & Loans will have a greater net income. In such a scenario, your quick-term liabilities (deposits) will be smaller than that of the lengthy-term yields emitted by your assets (mortgages). We would therefore have a successful "distribution."
B) Strong inflation increases interest rates throughout the yield curve. If the growth were high, short-term rates could be higher than the long-term interest rates that reigned before the inflation rise.Since then, when interest rates were lower, the majority of fixed-rate mortgage loans was initiated, the savings & loan deposits (liabilities) cost more than yields on resources. If this continues for any period, the Savings & Loans stock (reserves) will be emptied to the extent that bankruptcy would not be prevented by a "bailout.". In reality, in the United States, this has occurred. So it'd be easier for Savings & loand to sell their mortgages to federal agencies and receive service fees in this case than to keep the mortgages originating from them.