Longtime Brookings economist and former presidential adviser
Barry Bosworth examines why saving rates in the United States have
fallen so precipitously over the past quarter century, why the
initial consequences were surprisingly benign, and how reduced
saving will affect the future well-being of Americans.
"The Decline in Saving" provides an extensive and unparalleled
account of the complexity of present saving patterns, an issue made
even more serious by the 2008?09 global economic and financial
crises. It objectively examines saving at both the individual
household and the aggregate economy levels to understand whether
the U.S. decline in saving is truly a threat to American
prosperity.
Highlights from "The Decline in Saving:
""The magnitude of the two-decade-long fall in household saving
has been truly astonishing; it is even more surprising in view of
the fact that the large cohort of baby boomers should have been in
their peak saving years."
"If Americans save so little, why are they so rich? This
divergence emerges because the conventional measure of saving
excludes all forms of capital gains...."
"Saving behavior appears to be influenced in important ways by
country-specific institutional factors along with a few common
determinants, such as income growth, demographic changes, and
variations in private wealth."
"In the aggregate, the United States has had a negative net
national saving rate since the onset of the financial crisis, and
it now relies on foreign resource inflows to finance all its
capital accumulation and a portion of its consumption."
"The optimistic projections of just a few years ago about the
future well-being of retirees now seem seriously dated."
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