At this point, I'm not sure if you understand the economic reasons as to why? We've already been over this. Why do you think they are not raising the rates? Do you think they want runaway inflation and are doing it on purpose?I honestly do not understand why governments do not raise rates. Most of the debt issued during the last 10 years is at fixed rates, so whatever the interest rates are in the future that debt will not be affected. Mortgage holders, people who took up fixed-rate mortgages in the last 7 years approximately will not be affected either.
The bond market is cracking at the seams, and the FED is tapering their QE by just $10b a month (They buy $80 billion of Treasury securities and $40 billion of agency mortgage-backed securities each month). This is nothing. They are doing this because the economy is slowing down and is not in great shape; they are trying to boost economic output (but failing).
The Treasury market is swinging all over the place, and some are shorting it. This is because US Treasury notes are turning into junk. When you have volatility in the price of Treasuries it has a big effect on everything because their yields are used to value more than $50 trillion in assets around the world. Trading off-the-run securities are difficult when the liquidity dries up. Nobody wants bonds anymore, so that begs the question: what would you raise the rates to? I agree they need to be raised, but I can also see how bad this predicament is. I get the feeling that you think you can just raise the rates and everything will get back on track, but it's not as simple as that.
As for mortgages, you are conveniently forgetting that fixed rates run out at short intervals. Many will need renewing this year and next, and then you have millions of people who just want to get on the property ladder. What about them? What about businesses that can't afford high-interest loans? That's why I keep repeating that there is no easy solution to this mess. Raising the rates is needed, but they will likely need to be raised to double digits to contain the inflation and that can't be done in this economic climate. It will cause absolute chaos. They will try to raise it really slowly, but the damage is already done, let's face it. The cat's out of the bag now.
From reading your posts, it seems your main problem is with tech companies not paying their fair share of tax, as that's what you always come back to. I 100% agree with you that they should pay their taxes, no question. I think this pisses everybody off, but that's the system the government have built. They use loopholes and it's the government's job to close them. It's also a double-edged sword, because a lot of these companies create thousands if not millions of jobs worldwide.