by odegaard » Mon 04 May 2009, 05:25:06
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', 'I')nteresting thread....
It seems to me that it's a lot of sleight-of-hand, whatever the figures, especially when it's considered in a historical context.
For example:
John Doe has a $1000 mortgage, $250 in utilities, a $300 car payment, and $100 monthly minimum credit card payments on a balance of 10,000. That's $1650 in payments. John Doe makes $3500 clear per month, of which an additional $1350 goes towards groceries, gas for the car, an occasional latte at Starbucks. So he spends $3000 of his $3500 at a minimum, which would be a savings rate of about 15%, pretty good by American standards. But let's say he was putting an extra $50 per month towards the credit card balance. Does this reduce his savings rate? Well, yeah, because he's added $50 towards his liability payments. Conversely, if the credit card company decides he needs to pay $200 minimum per month, does this reduce his savings rate? Of course it does. However, in both situations, he's the better for it long-term because he's eliminating liabilities quicker.
Now let's say John Doe feels he might lose his job soon. He goes down and flips the car for a cheaper model and a longer-term loan, and after absorbing the trade-in hit gets a car payment of $250 per month (for a much longer period). Did he increase his savings rate? Yes, he did, despite the fact that his balance sheet just took a big hit. The same thing could be said if he decided to quit paying the credit cards down faster.
Historically, people had no long-term liabilities other than a 30 year mortgage. Prior to 1960 most people didn't even have a car loan. Thus, whatever they "saved" was theirs, so to speak - there weren't any hidden liabilities obscured in governmental figures. It seems to me that any discussion of savings rates without equal discussion of household debt burden is useless. It wouldn't surprise me in the least if the government's idea of a savings rate went up as people start hording cash. That in turn can have a detrimental effect on other liabilities.
good post
My biggest beef against the BEA charts is they are based on Disposable income and NOT after tax income.
It has it's uses:
For example if you're running a bank and want to decide if an applicant is qualified for a loan then obviously looking at disposable income gives more information on the applicant's ability to make payments then looking at after tax income.
However what purpose does representing the savings rate relative to disposable income accomplish other than to artificially make the numbers look bigger / prettier?
Of course it is the job of government to keep the people fooled so they don't know how bad things are getting!
I know I can't be the only person here, but when I calculate how much money I save every month I look at it relative to my (after tax income) and NOT my (disposable income)
