As a proportion of income
saved by UK households
has steadily decreased
Keynesians tend to
favour a fall in the
savings ratio
Austrian economists say the
decline in saving will hamper
capital formation and the
country's ability to grow
Factors driving consumption
Disposable income
In 1995 gross
disposable income
was £503k whereas
in 2005 it was £817k
Fall in the savings ratio
Disposable income
measures the income
that households have to
either consume or save,
once fixed outgoings
such as debt interest
have been paid
According to Keynesians the
increase in consumption caused
by the above factors created
short term economic growth
enjoyed during the NICE decade
Keynesian view
They believe that the level of
output and employment depends
upon the level of aggregate
demand in the economy.
Keynesians refute
the classical assertion
that the economy is
self-regulating
They stimulate short run
growth by running huge
fiscal deficits
Paradox of Thrift
Thrift is beneficial
for the individual
but bad for society
as a whole
More savings mean
that less consumption.
So there's less AD and
hence less output and
employment.
Interest rates
The Bank of England has lowered
interest rates to 0.5% and this meant
savers got negative real interest rates
Best interest rate
offered was 2.89% but
RPI was 4.7%.
Inflation
Bank refused to
implement tighter
monetary policy to
control inflation when
it was 3%
Inflation going
forward has always
been
underestimated.
Inflation reduces
incentive to save because
inflation compromises the
ability of money to act as
a store of value
If savers begin to doubt the Bank of
England's commitment to its
inflation target, the savings ratio is
likely to decline further in
anticipation of higher interest rates.
Tax and benefit system
It no longer matters if
households save because the
state pays for mortgages if a
person becomes redundant
In September 2010, the
coalition reduced the rate of
this benefit by 40%.
However even after this reduction
half of the people claiming will
receive more than the interest due
on their mortgage courtesy of the
taxpayer
A depreciating currency
Policymakers in the US and
UK have tried to engineer an
export led recovery
Keynesians argue that a
falling currency can help to
create an export led
recovery because it helps
with competitiveness.
Central Banks have used
policies such as QE and zero
interest rates to depreciate
their own currencies.
Has penalised those who
have chosen to save in
USD and GBP
Why is the paradox of thrift wrong?
Investment increases productive growth
Without saving there
can be no
investment
Banks like Northern Rock werea bel
to compensate for the UK's low
savings ratio by borrowing from
foreigners such as the Chinese
Barclays
Credit Crunch will continue until people
save again. Austrian economists say that
property speculation is malinvestment.
Malinvestment does not
contribute to productive growth
Malinvestment creates debt
Pre credit crunch data
China and India have persistently
out saved and out invested
countries such as the UK and the
USA
To create higher levels of investment and
long run economic growth, the Bank of
England must stop trying to hold UK
interest rates down at an artificially low
level
Central bank price fixing
Low interest rates discourage saving
Fixing has created excess
demand within the money
market