Frugality [electronic resource] : Are We Fretting Too Much? Household Saving and Assets in the United States / Evan Tanner.

By: Tanner, Evan CContributor(s): Abdih, Yasser | Tanner, Evan CMaterial type: TextTextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 09/197Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2009Description: 1 online resource (51 p.)ISBN: 1451873441 :ISSN: 1018-5941Subject(s): Cointegration | Consumer Durables | Disposable Income | Equation | Labor Income | Net Worth | United StatesAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Frugality : Are We Fretting Too Much? Household Saving and Assets in the United StatesOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: Household savings rates in the United States have recently crept up from all-time lows. Some have suggested that a shift toward frugality will hamper GDP growth-the Keynesian "paradox of thrift." We estimate that households compensate for a fall in their asset income by saving more out of their labor income, dollar-for-dollar. In the wake of the crisis, our model predicts that such primary savings will increase, but only temporarily and modestly, as household assets stabilize. As savings flows gradually accumulate, they help rebuild corporate net worth and hence firms' capacity to make capital investments. A timely return to pre-crisis levels of capital investment would require that U.S. households save substantially more than the model predicts, starting now. Hence, we should fret that our savings rates may be too low.
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Household savings rates in the United States have recently crept up from all-time lows. Some have suggested that a shift toward frugality will hamper GDP growth-the Keynesian "paradox of thrift." We estimate that households compensate for a fall in their asset income by saving more out of their labor income, dollar-for-dollar. In the wake of the crisis, our model predicts that such primary savings will increase, but only temporarily and modestly, as household assets stabilize. As savings flows gradually accumulate, they help rebuild corporate net worth and hence firms' capacity to make capital investments. A timely return to pre-crisis levels of capital investment would require that U.S. households save substantially more than the model predicts, starting now. Hence, we should fret that our savings rates may be too low.

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