BackUnderstanding Macroeconomic Data: Saving & Wealth in Macroeconomic Theory
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Understanding Macroeconomic Data: Saving & Wealth
Introduction
This study guide summarizes key concepts from Macroeconomic Theory I (ECON 222), focusing on the measurement and significance of saving and wealth in macroeconomic analysis. It covers definitions, formulas, and applications relevant to national accounts and saving behavior, with a particular emphasis on Canada.
Why is Saving Important?
Saving vs. Wealth
Saving is a flow variable that represents the portion of income not consumed, while wealth is a stock variable representing accumulated assets at a point in time. National wealth depends on how much a country has saved and invested over time.
Saving does not measure a nation's wealth directly, but contributes to its accumulation.
National Wealth is determined by the sum of domestic capital stock and net foreign assets.
National Wealth | = | Domestic Capital Stock | + | Foreign Assets | - | Foreign Liabilities |
|---|
Example: If Canada increases its saving, it can invest more in domestic capital or acquire more foreign assets, increasing its national wealth.
How is Saving Measured?
Aggregate Saving
Saving is the portion of national income available for investment, calculated as the sum of private and government saving.
Aggregate Saving:
National Saving:
Where:
= GDP (Gross Domestic Product)
= Net Factor Payments from abroad
= Consumption
= Government Purchases
Saving Measured: First Perspective
Saving can be broken down into its components: household, firm, and government saving.
Sum of Parts:
Private Saving: Disposable income not used for consumption:
Where = Taxes, = Transfers, = Interest payments
Government Saving: Revenues less expenditures:
Budget Surplus: When
Budget Deficit: When
Saving Measured: Second Perspective
Saving is also viewed as aggregate output (income) not consumed.
Here, is GDP and is net factor payments, together forming GNP (Gross National Product).
Using the definition of GDP:
So,
Simplifies to:
Example: If Canada has high investment () and a positive net export plus net factor payment balance, its national saving will be high.
How is Private Saving Used?
Current Account and Saving
Private saving finances domestic investment, the current account balance, and the government budget deficit.
Current Account (CA): Records net payments with the rest of the world.
Net Exports (NX): Payments received from exports minus payments for imports.
Net Factor Payments (NFP): Payments received for factor services sold abroad minus payments for factor services bought from abroad.
Current Account Surplus: When
Current Account Deficit: When
Saving | Investment | Current Account | Budget Deficit |
|---|---|---|---|
Example: If the government runs a deficit (), private saving must finance both investment and the deficit, possibly requiring foreign borrowing (negative CA).
Saving Rate in Canada
Is Saving Rate High Enough?
The saving rate measures the proportion of disposable income that is saved. It is an important indicator of economic health and future investment capacity.
Household Saving Rate:
= Household net saving
= Household disposable income
Household saving rates in Canada have declined since the 1980s but rose dramatically during COVID-19.
Private Saving Rate (households + firms):
= Firm saving, = Firm disposable income
Private saving rate followed a similar pattern to household saving rate.
National saving rate, , has no obvious trend.
Saving Rate Trends in Canada
Historical data shows fluctuations in household and private saving rates as a percentage of national income, with notable increases during economic shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic.
Graphs indicate household saving peaked in the early 1980s and spiked again in 2020.
Private saving rate also increased during periods of economic uncertainty.
Example: During COVID-19, both household and private saving rates increased sharply due to reduced consumption and increased precautionary saving.
Key Formulas Summary
Additional info: The notes infer the importance of saving for national wealth, the role of the current account, and the impact of government budget deficits on private saving. The saving rate trends are illustrated with Canadian data, highlighting macroeconomic responses to major events.