It's All About Wealth

Anomalies In The Measurement Of Savings And Growing Wealth Suggest That Measured Savings Rates Are Not As Big A Problem As They Appear To Be

By Susan M. Sterne

Susan M. Sterne is president & chief economist of Economic Analysis Associates, Inc., which provides research and consulting services on the consumer sector to institutional investors and industry. Her expertise extends to all aspects of the consumer, including quantitative, demographic, and behavioral. Her approach is mostly “bottom up” and includes detailed company analysis together with primary economic research. She received the NABE Outlook Award from the National Association for Business Economics in 2002. Prior to founding Economic Analysis Associates in 1979, Mrs. Sterne was vice president and manager of the Consumer Research Group at Salomon Brothers and had previously held economic research posts with other Wall Street firms, including Faulkner, Dawkins & Sullivan; Cyrus J. Lawrence, Inc.; and Goldman Sachs and Company. She has served on advisory boards of the U.S. Department of Commerce and the University of Michigan Survey Research Center and is past chairman of the Conference of Business Economists.

The saving rate and amount of consumer savings has taken on heightened importance in both the cyclical and secular settings. Does the current low consumer saving rate imply that spending must grow less than income in coming months, therefore slowing economic growth? Does the large and soon-to-reach-retirementage Post WW II baby boom population have enough savings to continue to support consumption and economic growth over the next decade? To answer these questions, we first look at how well the standard NIPA saving rate measures savings, and we find it inadequate. We then turn to the more difficult task of determining the amount and adequacy of consumer savings for the large, soon–to–retire baby boom population.

 

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