National Savings
Categories: Econ, International
The term “national savings” refers to the total of all private and public savings in a country. Alllll the money socked away for a rainy day.
You get your monthly paycheck. You pay your rent, buy food, shell out cash for your utilities, your internet service, your phone, a few trips to the go-cart track, and...maybe buy your mom flowers for her birthday. At the end of the month, you have $12.17 left. That goes into your savings account: the same starter savings account you first opened when you were twelve. That $12.17 also gets counted in the national savings total. Your $12.17 gets added to the hundreds of millions of dollars Jeff Bezos wired to various Wall Street banking institutions. And all the other money saved by people and companies and governments in the country. All of that dough is totaled to constitute the national savings.
In practice, the national savings figure isn't calculated by adding up everyone's bank accounts. Jeff Bezos’ finances are much more complicated than those in your Junior Savings Account, which still entitles you to a lollipop with every deposit. It might be hard to get a firm grasp on just how much money Bezos has saved to pay for the eventual vacation community on the moon he plans to build with Elon Musk.
Getting honest data on those savings numbers is difficult. Meanwhile, other people are burying cash in mason jars in the back yard in case the zombie apocalypse comes and all the banks shut down. Getting a good estimate on those totals would be difficult, too. So instead of adding up all the savings account totals, national savings is calculated a different way. Instead, the figure is computed by taking the amount of money people earn in a period...and subtracting the amount they spend.
People either spend or save their money. That's the assumption here. What they didn't spend, they must have saved. In terms of an equation: national savings equals disposable personal income minus personal consumption expenditures.
Disposable personal income represents the amount left over in people's paychecks after they pay their taxes. The amount they have available to spend, or save. Meanwhile, personal consumption expenditures represent the spending total. The difference between the two...is what's been saved.
When comparing countries, national savings is given as a rate. Big countries will always have a big total for savings. But it doesn't mean they’re good at saving. So to compare, you need to compute a rate. For that, you take the amount saved and calculate the ratio of that number with the country's GDP. That figure gives you the national savings rate. Some countries save a lot. Others...save very little.
On one end of the spectrum, you've got Singapore. It had a national savings rate of 46.5% of GDP in 2017. Close to half of all the money earned in the country went into savings. On the other end, you've got Greece. Savings rate of 10.9% in 2017. A little over 10% of the money earned there got saved, meaning just under 90% got spent as soon as it arrived.
The United States is closer to Greece on the list. It's gross national savings rate totaled 17.5% in 2017.
Before you start yelling at your family at the next Thanksgiving about how they need to save more...the low savings rate is largely the government's fault. National savings includes government figures as well. Part of the issue for the U.S. is that the federal government runs a heavy deficit. Which eats into the overall savings rate for the country. The federal government ran a deficit of $665 billion in 2017.
It would take an awful lot of $12.17 deposits into your Junior Savings Account to cancel it out.
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Econ: What are National Savings?1 Views
And finance Allah shmoop What Our national savings The term
national savings refers to the total of all private and
public savings in a country All the money socked away
for you know that rainy day you get your monthly
paycheck you pay your rent you buy food and shell
up cash for your utilities your Internet service your phone
a few trips to the go kart track and maybe
buy your mom flowers for her birthday Well at the
end of the month you have twelve dollars seventeen cents
a left That goes into your savings account the same
starter savings account you first opened when you were twelve
Well that twelve dollars seventeen cents also gets counted in
the national savings total Well your twelve dollars seventeen cents
gets added to the one hundred million dollars or so
that a hedge fund manager made and paid himself for
basically pushing people's money around and taking a big fat
fee for it So he keeps that money That's his
savings And then you have all the other money saved
by people in companies and governments in the country They
all get added up All of that dough is totaled
two comprise the national savings well in practice The national
savings figure isn't calculated by adding everyone's bank accounts Jeff
Bezos Finances are much more complicated than those in York
you know junior savings account which still entitles you to
a lollypop with every deposit It might be hard to
get a firm grasp on just how much money Bezos
has saved a pay for the eventual vacation community on
the moon he plans to build with Ellen Moscow actually
may be the new one is going to be built
on Mars What do you think Well getting those savings
numbers may be difficult to get Teo because well for
Bezos and Musk most of their wealth is in stock
It hasn't been converted to cash savings so it just
sits there and it goes up with the market or
a little better than the market these days anyway Meanwhile
other people are burying cash in Mason jars in the
backyard In case you know the zombie apocalypse comes back
and all the bank's just go away or shut down
we're getting a good estimate on these totals in total
savings numbers is difficult So instead of adding up all
the savings account totals National savings is calculated a different
way Instead the figure is computed by taking the amount
of money people earn in a period when just subtracting
the amount they spend Yes very clever Well people either
spend or save their money That's the assumption here What
they didn't spend well they must have saved right Well
in terms of an equation national savings equals disposable personal
income minus personal consumption expenditures That's the big equation Well
disposable personal income represents the amount left over in people's
paychecks after they pay their taxes The amount they have
available to spend or save is you know what's left
well Meanwhile personal consumption expenditures represent the spending total The
difference between the two Well that's what's been saved when
comparing country's national savings is given as a rate like
big countries will always have a big total for savings
but it doesn't mean that they're good at saving So
to compare you need to compute a rate of savings
So for that computation to take place you take the
amount saved and calculate the ratio of that number with
the country's GDP That figure then gives you the national
savings rate Some countries save a lot Others say very
little So you know on one end of the spectrum
you've got the Singapore here It had a national savings
rate of Yes forty six point five percent of GDP
in two thousand seventeen Close toe Half of the money
earned in the country went to savings on the other
end You've got grease Hello Bankrupt Greece Yes we feel
your shame Savings rate of only ten point nine percent
in two thousand seventeen Little over ten percent of the
money earned their got saved Meaning Just under ninety percent
of it got spent as soon as it arrived Well
the U S is a lot closer to Greece Sadly
on the list it's gross National savings rate told seventeen
and a half percent in two thousand seventeen And before
you start yelling at your family at the next Thanksgiving
about how they need to save more the low savings
rate is largely the government's fault Yes White House We're
looking at you National savings includes government figures Well part
of the issue for the U S is that the
federal government runs a heavy deficit mat number that spend
leaps into the overall savings rate for the country for
the federal government ran a deficit of six hundred sixty
five billion dollars in two thousand seventeen cost us a
fortune and it had taken off a lot of our
twelve dollars seventeen cent deposits into our junior savings account
Tio you know cancel all that huge government debt out
So what We just eat it That's it National savings