Tuesday, May 19, 2009

standard national accounts' measure of the saving rate did not take into account the increases in wealth associated to rising asset prices

From Antonio Fatas and Ilian Mihov on the Global Economy:

"No wonder why we see bubbles in financial markets.

Here is an article written about 18 months ago that was justifying the low personal saving rate in the US using the argument that the standard national accounts' measure of the saving rate did not take into account the increases in wealth associated to rising asset prices. The article was written in September 2007 right before the crisis started. It was written by David Malpass, who was at that point chief global economist for Bear Sterns. That increase in wealth is gone (and so is Bear Stearns).

Antonio Fatás"

Me:

Don said...

I don't think that you're being fair. It's as if people saved money by buying longer term bonds at low interest and inflation kicked in for a long time. The problem was the allocation of savings, and the writer seems to agree with that.

The main problem with his post is that he fails to note that we're in a housing bubble, but he was hardly alone in that.

Don the libertarian Democrat

May 19, 2009 11:04 AM

No comments: