Jump to content

6 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

Filed: Timeline
Posted

By Martin Hutchinson

Amid the recent financial crisis, the United States made some progress towards solving its biggest economic problem of recent years: the lack of US savings. Regrettably, in the latest figures, the beginnings of economic recovery have brought backsliding, with the savings rate dropping back to 4.3% from 6%. Without more savings, as global liquidity declines, the United States will quickly become a capital-starved economy, losing investment to capital surplus countries where savings are plentiful. The difficult questions are: what caused the savings decline, and what can be done to reverse it?

During the halcyon years of the 1950s and 1960s, the US savings rate - the percentage of disposable personal income that is saved - was consistently over 10%. That is nowhere near as high as the 40% savings rates consistently seen in China (though questions remain over the quality of Chinese statistics), nor the 25% to 30% of the other major East Asian economies during their takeoff phases. The United States was always a culture not particularly given to saving, and 10% is not a brilliant savings rate - it is for example lower than Germany's level even in today's culture, of a solid 11% - but it was sufficient to allow the great economic growth of the 1950s and 1960s to be financed domestically.

The US savings rate began to decline during the 1970s. That was not surprising; during that decade the stock market went nowhere (declining heavily in real terms) while interest rates were steadily negative in real terms, even lower when you take account of the fact that savers had to pay tax on gains and interest income that was eaten away by inflation.

After the 1970s, one would have expected the savings rate to rebound. Real interest rates were very high in the 1980s, inflation came down from 1982, and the stock market embarked on a generation-long bull market that was to raise the Dow Jones Industrial Average to 10 times its 1982 level. Yet instead of rising, the savings rate fell. From an average level of 10.8% in the 1960s and 8.6% in the 1970s, the savings rate declined to an average of 5.8% in the 1980s. The deep 1981-82 reduced it, as one would have expected (the savings rate went negative during the worst years of the Great Depression), but it never recovered thereafter.

The savings rate declined somewhat further, to 4.9%, during the 1990s; again it dipped during the early 1990s recession, then recovered in that later 1990s, when real interest rates were low but stock market investment was uniquely appealing.

Then from a peak of 6% to 7% in 2000, the savings rate declined to depths not plumbed since the bottom of the Great Depression, reaching 1.8% in 2003, near the bottom of that relatively mild recession, then failing to recover significantly before plunging again in 2007-08 to a level currently assessed at exactly zero.

There appear at first glance to be three factors that may have affected the trend in savings rates:

The first and most important is the return available to saving. If as at present or in the 1970s, deposits and fixed-income investments provide savers with a return that is less than the rate of inflation, then savings rates are bound to decline. People won't save because they are being penalized for doing so. This is why the expansive monetary policies favored by former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, his successor Ben Bernanke, and others are so misguided. A capitalist economy cannot survive if its risk-free rate of return is below or close to zero for prolonged periods because people will have no incentive to defer consumption and so capital will disappear. You only have to look at the unhappy fate suffered by the German Weimar Republic and various Latin American countries in bouts of hyperinflation to see the result of de-capitalizing the economy in this way.

Argentina is for this reason no longer a rich country. Its people are perfectly industrious and 97.2% are literate, its education system is adequate, its natural resources are abundant, its climate is healthy, yet through bouts of hyperinflation, its governments have de-capitalized its economy. Without a recovery in the savings rate, the United States is heading down the Argentine route to perdition.

The second reason why the savings rate may have declined is the revolution in consumer finance since the 1960s. This supposition is reinforced by the higher savings rate in Germany, a country with a more generous pensions and healthcare safety net than the United States (which should depress private savings), but with less overwhelmingly available consumer finance. This factor may explain a large part of the savings rate's decline in the 1980s.

The first unsolicited credit card offers were sent out by Citigroup in 1978, and by the middle 1980s cards were proliferating and it was perfectly possible to carry several of them. Total consumer debt outstanding remained constant as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) in the 1970s, falling to 12.4% of GDP from 12.5%; it then took off around 1980, rising to 13.8% of GDP in 1990, 16.3% of GDP in 2000 and 17.7% of GDP by its 2008 peak. Thus from 1980 to 2008, consumer debt rose annually by an average of 0.19% of GDP (in addition to its natural rise from economic growth) - about 0.3% of personal consumption. That's a significant albeit modest contribution to the savings rate's decline.

The third reason, impossible to quantify, is the attitude to saving of the US population itself. The generation who were adults in the 1950s and 1960s had experienced the Great Depression. That did not simply make them cautious; it also gave them a high regard for the value of substantial savings - which had after all increased in real value by 25% in the first years of the Depression.

Conversely, the baby boomers and their successors, the adults of the 1980s or today, have not experienced real financial hardship and, in the 1970s, saw inflation eat away inexorably at the value of savings. One need not grind one's teeth at the moral inferiority of the baby boomers to realize that their different life histories might reasonably have given them different attitudes to saving. The same effect seems to have occurred in Japan, where savings rates dropped to around 5% today from 25-30% in the 1970s; the stock market slump and economic stagnation are unlikely to provide a sufficient explanation for this change.

To restore the US savings rate, we thus need three things: higher savings rates (painful, but easy, and necessary in other respects), tighter consumer finance availability (tricky), and reversion to the pro-savings attitudes of the 1950s and 1960s (very difficult.) Nevertheless, the goal is sufficiently worthwhile to the long-term future of the US economy that a number of policies leading in its direction might be tried, as follows:

# Prolonged period of interest rates at least 3% above inflation, together with tax changes allowing the elimination of inflationary erosion of capital from investment income.

# Elimination of tax-deductibility of mortgage and other interest, and of all government subsidies to home ownership, including in particular Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guarantee programs. In today's private market, 20% down payments for home mortgages would be required by banks forced to hold mortgages themselves. This would force massive saving.

# Rapid elimination of the federal deficit, reducing the government's contribution to national de-capitalization.

# A "Tobin tax" on securities transactions, primarily affecting Wall Street trading operations, but also removing the percentage of national wealth acquired through short-term speculation.

# Heavy excise on casinos, hotels and transportation to casino destinations, and abolition of state lotteries, reducing the gambling propensities in US society. "Get rich quick" methodologies of all kinds must be discouraged.

# Full funding by government of the requirement that indigent patients receive treatment in hospital emergency rooms. Also tight limits on medical liability damages and removal of restrictions on inter-state purchase of health care. Apart from making medical care affordable, this would reduce the truly exorbitant charges by urban hospitals, eliminating much of the medical bankruptcy risk and making savings more attractive through reducing the risk of some leech hospital seizing them.

# Elimination or drastic reduction of the "death tax" to encourage capital accumulations in families.

# Elimination of the double taxation of corporate dividends, by making them deductible at the corporate level (while fully taxable at the individual level.)

# Prohibitions against unsolicited mass credit-card mailings and their e-commerce equivalents.

# If necessary, a credit tax on all purchases not paid for in cash or by debit card or check. This would have the effect of a limited value-added-tax, but applied to credit transactions only.

As you can see, there are innumerable unpopular but fairly easy steps that could be taken towards raising the savings rate. We can't recreate the psychology of the 1950s, but these changes taken as a whole would push society in that direction.

If the alternative is an Argentine future, the pain would be worth it.

Martin Hutchinson is the author of Great Conservatives (Academica Press, 2005) - details can be found at www.greatconservatives.com.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/KJ28Dj01.html

Man is made by his belief. As he believes, so he is.

Posted (edited)

They must have sent their money to Ubank in Aus: 5.11% interest rate :wow: I am getting better and safer returns on my cash sitting in an Aussie savings account than in the US stock market.

Don't hate the players bud, just the game.

Edited by Booyah!

According to the Internal Revenue Service, the 400 richest American households earned a total of $US138 billion, up from $US105 billion a year earlier. That's an average of $US345 million each, on which they paid a tax rate of just 16.6 per cent.

Filed: Country: Brazil
Timeline
Posted
purchasing lots of things on sale isn't saving? :huh:

:lol:

I guess that's what it means in America - everywhere else it means "not spending".

not many people know the old fashioned way to double your money ....

fold it in half and put it back in your pocket .... ;)

bump ... does this mean ....

people on vj live on coupons and sales? :unsure:

 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
×
×
  • Create New...