The Return of Saving



Similar documents
Macroeconomic Influences on U.S. Agricultural Trade

Econ 202 Section 4 Final Exam

Reading the balance of payments accounts

Econ 202 Section 2 Final Exam

a) Aggregate Demand (AD) and Aggregate Supply (AS) analysis

Big Concepts. Balance of Payments Accounts. Financing International Trade. Economics 202 Principles Of Macroeconomics. Lecture 12

A Nation of Spendthrifts? An Analysis of Trends in Personal and Gross Saving

What three main functions do they have? Reducing transaction costs, reducing financial risk, providing liquidity

National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments

Defining Housing Equity Withdrawal

Lecture 7: Savings, Investment and Government Debt

THE GREAT DEPRESSION OF FINLAND : causes and consequences. Jaakko Kiander Labour Institute for Economic Research

Peak Debt and Income

Balance of Payments Accounting. (guidelines recommended by the IMF International Monetary Fund )

INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS MIDTERM- SAMPLE QUESTIONS

Statistics Netherlands. Macroeconomic Imbalances Factsheet

THE POTENTIAL MACROECONOMIC EFFECT OF DEBT CEILING BRINKMANSHIP

Lecture The Twin Deficits

Economic Commentaries

CAN INVESTORS PROFIT FROM DEVALUATIONS? THE PERFORMANCE OF WORLD STOCK MARKETS AFTER DEVALUATIONS. Bryan Taylor

1 Multiple Choice - 50 Points

Economics 212 Principles of Macroeconomics Study Guide. David L. Kelly

LECTURE NOTES ON MACROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES

The Macroeconomic Situation and Monetary Policy in Russia. Ladies and Gentlemen,

Risks and Rewards Newsletter

Chapter 17. Financial Management and Institutions

2.5 Monetary policy: Interest rates

Commentary: What Do Budget Deficits Do?

Economic Factors Affecting Small Business Lending and Loan Guarantees

Section 2 Evaluation of current account balance fluctuations

Debt, Deficits, and the Economy. John J. Seater

Chapter 12. Aggregate Expenditure and Output in the Short Run

MGE#12 The Balance of Payments

GOVERNMENT ECONOMIC OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES. Textbook, Chapter 26 [pg ]

PRACTICE- Unit 6 AP Economics

Effects on pensioners from leaving the EU

Chapter 12. National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments. Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop

The International Monetary Order and the Canadian Economy

FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATES

13 EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS: THE KEYNESIAN MODEL* Chapter. Key Concepts

Lecture 3: Int l Finance

Study Questions for Chapter 9 (Answer Sheet)

Lecture 4: The Aftermath of the Crisis

Balance of Payments. BoP Account Definitions. Tracking International Flows Of Goods and Services. Balance of Payments

Chapter 6 Economic Growth

How To Get Rich In The United States

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapter. Key Concepts

A Beginner s Guide to the Stock Market

Statement by. Janet L. Yellen. Chair. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. before the. Committee on Financial Services

EC2105, Professor Laury EXAM 2, FORM A (3/13/02)

Exam 1 Review. 3. A severe recession is called a(n): A) depression. B) deflation. C) exogenous event. D) market-clearing assumption.

For your free precious metals investment consultation, ccall Tom Cloud at (800) For the best prices including free shipping and insurance,

7. Which of the following is not an important stock exchange in the United States? a. New York Stock Exchange

What Forces Drive International Trade, Finance, and the External Deficit?

Taiwan Life Insurance Market Report for First Half of 2013

Project LINK Meeting New York, October Country Report: Australia

Is there a revolution in American saving?

Savings, Investment Spending, and the Financial System

Key elements of Monetary Policy

BPE_MAC1 Macroeconomics 1 Spring Semester 2011

Foreign Currency Exposure and Hedging in Australia

Statement by Dean Baker, Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research (

THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: Is This a REPEAT OF THE 80 S FOR AGRICULTURE? Mike Boehlje and Chris Hurt, Department of Agricultural Economics

WITH-PROFIT ANNUITIES

Overview. Growing a Real Estate Portfolio. Risks of Real Estate Investing

Managing Home Equity to Build Wealth By Ray Meadows CPA, CFA, MBA

Agenda. Saving and Investment in the Open Economy, Part 2. Globalization and the U.S. economy. Globalization and the U.S. economy

Practice Problems on Current Account

Financial Planning in a Low Interest Rate Environment: The Good, the Bad and the Potentially Ugly

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

13. If Y = AK 0.5 L 0.5 and A, K, and L are all 100, the marginal product of capital is: A) 50. B) 100. C) 200. D) 1,000.

BALANCE OF PAYMENTS AND FOREIGN DEBT

Hedging Using Forward Contracts

The U.S. Economy after September pushing us from sluggish growth to an outright contraction. b and there s a lot of uncertainty.

1. HOW THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT HAS CHANGED

In 2012, GNP in constant prices increased by 1.8% compared with 2011.

êéëé~êåü=üáöüäáöüí House Prices, Borrowing Against Home Equity, and Consumer Expenditures lîéêîáéï eçìëé=éêáåéë=~åç=äçêêçïáåö ~Ö~áåëí=ÜçãÉ=Éèìáíó

Personal debt ON LABOUR AND INCOME

The Wealth of Households: An Analysis of the 2013 Survey of Consumer Finances

Chapter 10 Fiscal Policy Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

Financing the U.S. Trade Deficit

With lectures 1-8 behind us, we now have the tools to support the discussion and implementation of economic policy.

CHAPTER 14 BALANCE-OF-PAYMENTS ADJUSTMENTS UNDER FIXED EXCHANGE RATES

Preparing Family Net Worth and Income Statements

The economic impact of an aging Japan

What Is the Balance of Payments?

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

Statement to Parliamentary Committee

Chapter 4 Consumption, Saving, and Investment

THE STATE OF THE ECONOMY

Transcription:

Martin Feldstein the u.s. savings rate and the global economy The savings rate of American households has been declining for more than a decade and recently turned negative. This decrease has dramatically reduced total national savings despite a rise in corporate saving. In 2003 and 2004, the combined net savings of households, businesses, and government were only about one percent of gross national income the lowest level in at least 50 years. This sharp decline in saving has had important implications for the United States and for the global economy. It has reduced productivity-enhancing net business investment in the United States to less than four percent of gdp and made the United States increasingly dependent on capital from the rest of the world to finance that investment. At the same time, the decreased national savings rate and the increase in consumer spending that it implies has induced a rise in U.S. imports. Those imports have contributed to the growth of output and employment in many countries around the world. The downward trend in U.S. household saving will likely soon be reversed. In the long term, a substantial rise in household saving will have a positive eªect on the U.S. economy. But the initial eªects will pose problems for the United States and its trading partners. If these eªects are not managed well, the result could be declines in output and employment and a corresponding rise in U.S. protectionism. Martin Feldstein is George F. Baker Professor of Economics at Harvard University and CEO of the National Bureau of Economic Research. [87]

Martin Feldstein home economics To appreciate the significance of these developments, it is helpful to have a more precise definition of net household savings. Household saving is the diªerence between what households receive in after-tax income (including wages, salaries, fringe benefits, interest, and dividends) and what they spend on goods and services. Those savings can take the form of bank deposits, purchases of financial assets such as stocks and bonds, or investments in real assets such as homes and unincorporated businesses. Contributions to individual retirement accounts (iras) and 401(k) plans as well as employer contributions to defined-benefit pension plans are also counted as household savings. So too is money used to pay down a mortgage or other loan. Borrowing is counted against saving, unless the borrowed funds are used to purchase financial assets or are converted into other types of savings. Individuals in their 40s and 50s tend to save money, whereas many in their 60s and beyond are dissavers, people who are spending the assets that they accumulated in their working years. A negative U.S. net household savings rate implies that the saving of the savers is less than the dissaving of the dissavers. Net household savings in the United States fell from an already low 1.7 percent in 2004 to -1 percent in the second half of 2005.This low and declining savings rate stands in sharp contrast to the rate until the mid-1990s: 7 percent or higher, which was enough to finance most investment in business infrastructure and equipment and in housing. That household saving has declined should come as no surprise. The rising prices of stocks and homes have made many Americans much wealthier. Despite the fall of the stock market in 2000, average share prices have more than doubled in the past decade. Housing prices have risen by more than 12 percent in the past year alone, and the total value of the real estate owned by households has risen by more than 50 percent in less than five years, an increase of more than $6 trillion. Between 2000 and the start of 2005, the overall net worth of the household sector increased by nearly $7 trillion. As a result, many individuals in their 40s and 50s looked at the value of their iras, 401(k) accounts, and homes and rightly concluded [88] foreign affairs. Volume 85 No. 3

that they did not have to save as much for their retirement as they would have had to in the past. And so they started saving less and spending more. Similarly, retirees looked at their substantial stockmarket and housing wealth and concluded that they could dissave much more than previous retirees. This combination of saving less and dissaving more produced the substantial decline in the net savings rate. The increase in consumer spending as a result of increased wealth has been reinforced by the process of mortgage refinancing. As mortgage interest rates have come down from nearly eight percent in the mid- 1990s to less than six percent, individuals have been able to increase the size of their mortgages without having to raise their monthly mortgage payments. Although some of the extra mortgage borrowing has been converted into other savings,much of it has been used to finance additional consumption. The amounts involved have been enormous. In the past five years, the value of U.S. home mortgage debt has increased by nearly $3 trillion. In 2004 alone, it increased by almost $1 trillion. Net mortgage borrowing not used for the purchase of new homes that year amounted to nearly $600 billion, or almost seven percent of disposable personal income. dependency theory Why is the decline of saving significant for the economy? Household savings matter because those funds have traditionally been used to finance business investment in equipment,software,and buildings,and this investment increases productivity, the rate of economic growth, and the future standard of living. Although the rise in household wealth that comes from higher stock and real estate prices feels like saving to individual households, it does not free up resources to increase investment in business capital. The low savings rate has thus forced the United States to become increasingly dependent on funds from the rest of the world to finance domestic business investment. Such capital inflows now finance more than three-quarters of U.S. net investment. U.S. dependence on foreign capital has increased very rapidly in recent years.the rate of net capital inflows in 2005 was more than twice that of 2001 and five times as much as that of 1997. Although American investors send capital abroad to buy foreign stocks and bonds and foreign affairs. May / June 2006 [89]

Martin Feldstein invest in overseas businesses, the flow of foreign capital to the United States has increased much more rapidly than U.S. investment abroad. Net inflows have grown from 1.7 percent of gdp in 1997 to an unprecedented 5.7 percent of U.S.gdp in 2004 and more than 6.4 percent in 2005. Foreign investors are able to get the dollars to finance these inflows of capital to the United States because Americans import more goods and services from the rest of the world than they export. When Americans buy something that is made abroad, they pay in dollars; when they sell something to foreign buyers, they earn some of those dollars back. In 2004, U.S. purchases from the rest of the world exceeded U.S. export sales by $618 billion. Americans also made various other net transfers to the rest of the world (including personal remittances, net interest and dividend payments, and government grants) of $51 billion. Combining the two yields the total current account deficit of $669 billion. That amount 5.7 percent of gdp is the total value of net capital inflows that came to the United States from the rest of the world in 2004. This basic accounting identity that the current account deficit is the amount of capital inflows to the United States links the U.S. trade imbalance to U.S. dependence on foreign capital. Accordingly, the United States can reduce its dependence on foreign capital inflows only if it reduces its current account deficit. Doing so will require a slowdown in the growth of consumer spending. The relatively rapid increase in consumer spending in the past decade and a half, and the resulting decline in the savings rate, is the primary reason for the large trade deficit and the associated capital inflows. But capital inflows have been possible only because foreign countries are willing suppliers of those funds. Low U.S. savings relative to U.S. business investment is necessarily mirrored by high savings relative to business investment in other countries. Their savings end up as investment in the United States rather than in other countries because of the United States large consumer-driven trade deficit. other people s money The flow of funds to the United States should be a matter of concern not only because it has increased so rapidly but also because those funds now come in what may prove to be a much less sustainable form. In [90] foreign affairs. Volume 85 No. 3

the late 1990s, most of the capital that flowed into the United States came in the form of equity investment by private investors buying stock in U.S. companies or buying U.S. companies outright. These private investors diversified their investments by moving into the U.S. market because they thought the potential equity returns in the United States were favorable in comparison to the risks. Now, in contrast, the flow of equity investment to the United States is very small often less than the equity investment that Americans make in the rest of the world. Today, the capital inflows to the United States primarily go toward purchasing bonds and making bank deposits, including very sizable deposits by foreign governments at the Federal Reserve. It is not clear how much of the overall capital inflow is coming from foreign governments and how much from private investors. The available data do not distinguish between purchases by banks on behalf of private investors and purchases by banks on behalf of foreign governments. But extensive conversations with o cials and private bankers suggest that an overwhelming share of the foreign capital inflows in recent years has come from foreign governments or from institutions acting on their behalf. Such a change, from private investment in U.S. equities to government purchases of U.S. debt, could make the continued flow of funds less reliable. Initially, foreign governments invested in dollar assets in order to increase their foreign exchange reserves, especially after the Asian financial crises in the late 1990s. South Korea now has more than $200 billion of o cial foreign exchange reserves (invested primarily in dollar bonds), Taiwan has more than $250 billion, and China has more than $800 billion. As a result, these countries no longer have to fear a speculative attack on their currencies or the possibility of being forced to accept an unwanted International Monetary Fund program. These large dollar reserves are also the result of the polices of these and other emerging-market countries to keep their currencies undervalued as a way of keeping their products relatively inexpensive and thus promoting exports. Since governments do not make investment decisions by simply balancing risk and return the way private investors do, it is particularly di cult to anticipate their future behavior. How long will foreign governments want to keep running large current account surpluses and foreign affairs. May / June 2006 [91]

Martin Feldstein investing those surpluses in relatively low-yield foreign bonds? And how will they respond to developments in the United States or in the global economy in the future? These unanswerable questions add to the overall uncertainty of the global economic outlook. trading places What can be safely anticipated is that the savings rate of American households will start to increase. It is not clear when that increase will begin, but household saving cannot continue indefinitely at a zero or negative level. Saving will begin to rise because the forces that have promoted rapid consumption growth and depressed saving over the past decade will not continue. Share prices are not likely to double again in the next decade, nor will housing prices continue to rise at double-digit rates. Accordingly, households will be able to increase their wealth for retirement and other purposes only by reducing the growth of their spending so that it is less than the growth of their after-tax incomes that is, by saving more. Most important, mortgage interest rates have stopped falling, bringing an end to the dissaving that occurred when homeowners simultaneously reduced their monthly mortgage payments and extracted massive amounts of cash simply by refinancing their mortgages. This suggests that there will be a relatively rapid rise in the savings rate. This coming rise in household saving will eventually be good for the U.S. economy. It will make the United States less dependent on capital from the rest of the world and permit American businesses to raise the rate of investment in the equipment, software, and structures that increase productivity and the future standard of living. But a higher U.S. savings rate will also pose a challenge for the rest of the world, because it will mean a reduction in the exports to and an increase in the imports from the United States. This shift will be true even for countries, such as those in western Europe, that do not currently have a trade surplus with the United States. It will reduce the overall aggregate demand and employment in countries that trade with the United States. To prepare for the inevitable rise in the U.S. savings rate, those countries should start [92] foreign affairs. Volume 85 No. 3

planning ways to stimulate their output and employment. The fact that the United States is not the only country in which rising asset prices have caused a sharp fall in saving over the past decade only adds to the urgency of such planning since the savings rates of those countries are also likely to rise, with similar consequences. The coming rise in the U.S. savings rate could temporarily cause a serious problem for the U.S. economy as well. As consumer spending falls, gdp and employment will also decline. This decline will last until net exports increase by an equal amount. If markets function well, the higher savings rate will quickly put downward pressure on real interest rates, causing the dollar to become more competitive until the rise in exports and the decline in imports return total gdp to its full employment level. However, there is the danger of a time lag between when the savings rate rises and when the U.S. trade deficit declines. Such a lag would cause a slowdown in the growth of output and employment, potentially leading to a recession. This downturn would be exacerbated if foreign governments restricted imports from the United States or prevented the natural downward adjustment of the dollar exchange rate.the political response in the United States could easily be the imposition of protectionist policies, including tariªs and quotas on imports. Foreign governments would thus do well to anticipate the coming rise in the U.S. savings rate. By permitting more exchange rate adjustment, foreign governments could mitigate the adverse cyclical eªects in the United States of a higher U.S. savings rate. Because it takes time for trade flows to respond to exchange rate adjustments, it would be best to allow exchange rates to adjust before the U.S. savings rate rises. Equally important, the United States trading partners must find ways to increase their domestic demand in order to maintain their output and employment even as exports to the United States decline. A failure to achieve both types of adjustments could lead to a wave of protectionist policies that would be in nobody s interest. foreign affairs. May / June 2006 [93]