by DantesPeak » Tue 02 Aug 2005, 11:58:09
The BEA says the following about 0% savings:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')aving from current income may be near zero or negative when outlays are financed by borrowing (including borrowing financed through credit cards or home equity loans), by selling investments or other assets, or by using savings from previous periods. Personal saving as a
percentage of disposable personal income was 0.0 percent in June, compared with 0.4 percent in May.
http://www.bea.gov/bea/newsrelarchive/2005/pi0605.pdfOr in other words, the consumer is reaching for the bottom of the cookie jar and not finding much left.
In the long run, the US can not sustain 0% national savings without the unlikley sitiuation of foreign savers/countries continually placing their money in the US basically forever.
In a similar vein, an article about low savings, national borrowing, and energy prices:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hile the efforts of the US consumer to get ahead of the encroaching energy shockwave have been valiant, they will not be able to keep outrunning it much longer.
Only by a combination of raiding consumers' savings and an increase in national borrowing (through the current account deficit), did the US achieve an economic gain in the second quarter. The personal savings rate plunged to a microscopic 0.2% from a revised average of 1.8% in 2004. The drop in the savings rate accounts for the sluggish M2 money supply growth, which has been growing only about 2.5% over the last six months. Inflation adjusted money supply, now negative, is considered a reliable leading indicator of economic activity by the Conference Board.