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SAVING:

"FOREIGN" BEHAVIOR FOR THE U.S.?
Remarks by Thomas C. Melzer
Rotary Club of Paducah
September 14, 1988

Today, we

all

recognize

that

economic

actions have a powerful influence on what

events

happens

our businesses and, of course, our own lives.

concerned

about

what

in our

communities,

Thus, while we can take

comfort that, at the present moment, the economy
shape, we are naturally

and related policy

is in reasonably good

the

future holds.

result, widespread public attention is focused on announcements

As a
of

the

latest inflation, output and employment numbers, the most recent federal
deficit figures, and the current trade deficit calculations.

We wonder

whether the next announcement will bring good news or bad; and what, if
anything, we

can do

to

prevent

some

of

our

potential

problems

from

becoming actual ones.
It is certainly true that the causes of our current and prospective
economic problems are many and varied.

However, there is one factor that

is related in a fundamental way to many of the prospective problems we
face—the extremely low rate of personal saving in this country.

Today,

I would like to say a few words about the general importance of saving;
why we, as a nation, need to save more; and what the Federal Reserve can
do to encourage saving.
Throughout history, saving has been characterized as truly virtuous
behavior.

In recent years, I am sorry to say, savings behavior

U.S. has not been

all

that

virtuous.

Since

in the

1982, as individuals, we

have saved, on average, about 2.3 percent of our income each year.
personal




savings

rate

is not

only

down

sharply

from

its

6.6

Our

percent

- 2 -

average rate in the late 1970s; it is also abysmally low when compared to
personal savings rates in other industrial countries.
1987,

the personal savings rate in Japan was about

Germany, almost 8 percent.

For

example,

in

11 percent, and in

While these rates may be a bit overstated due

to differences in measurement, there is still a whopping imbalance.
Now,

it might

be

easy

to

say

"so

what?" when

confronted

with

comparisons showing how low this nation ranks in terms of its savings.
After all, we are well into the
Since

sixth year

of

the

current

expansion.

1982, more than 15 million new jobs have been created; and over

this period, our real output growth has averaged better than 4 percent
per year.

However,

such a quick-and-easy dismissal of our failure to

save more would be a serious mistake.

Our lack of saving in this decade

has come to be viewed with alarm by many people for reasons that relate
closely to our national self-interest.
The problem we face is simple to state, but difficult to solve as
long as our savings rate remains low.

Our problem is where to find the

funds to provide for private investment, on the one hand, and to cover
our federal deficit, on the other.
As

you

well

know,

investment

is

vital

to

maintaining

economic

growth and, thereby, providing for continued expansion of jobs and income
in this country.

The record of continuing growth since 1982 could not

have been achieved if, in recent years, we had not spent about 16 percent
of our GNP on gross private domestic investment.
gross investment

totalled nearly

$720 billion.

will need to spend even more if our expansion
future.




Last year, for example,
This year and next, we
is to continue

into the

- 3 -

Another activity that absorbs funds is our federal deficit•
government

spending

additional

funds

exceeds

must

come

its
from

tax receipts
someone.

and

During

deficits have grown to substantial proportions.

other
the

When

revenues, the
1980s,

federal

Last year, for example,

the federal deficit exceeded $150 billion—the sixth triple-digit deficit
in a row; and this year it will again reach $150 billion or more.

Thus,

despite all our good intentions, it appears that large federal deficits
will be with us for some time to come.
Whether federal deficits are "good" or "bad" per se is not important
to what I am saying.

My point is simply that someone is going to have to

provide the funds to cover them—someone
government

bonds.

And

is going

to have to buy those

given the sheer size of our federal deficit, a

shortfall in funding could "squeeze out" private investment to a significant extent.
Now, "the $870 billion dollar question," to use last year f s

total

gross investment and federal deficit figure, is who is going to provide
the funds necessary to finance these requirements?

There are only three

potential sources of funds available for this purpose:

our own domestic

savings, the savings of foreigners, and government bond purchases by the
Federal Reserve System.

Does it matter to us who provides these funds?

The only way to answer this is to look at the consequences of each of
these sources of financing.
Let's start with our own domestic savings.

People save by spending

less on consumption goods than they earn in income.
of reasons:

to provide for retirement,

to

insure

We save for a variety
against

those

nasty

"rainy days," to purchase big-ticket items like cars and houses, and to
leave bequests.

Saving is a conscious effort to spend less now so that

we can spend more in the future.




- 4 -

Last

year, our personal savings totalled $120 billion, about

percent of our GNP.

2.7

This is less than 14 percent of the funds that were

spent on investment and the federal deficit.

Thankfully, there are other

sources of domestic savings in addition to our personal savings.

Gross

business

local

savings

contributed

more

than

$550 billion;

state

and

government surpluses added another $45 billion.

Thus, in total, we saved

about

was

$720

billion

of

the

$870 billion

that

spent

to

fund

U.S.

investment and the federal deficit last year.
Now,

where

in the world

Where in the world indeed!

did

the other

$150 billion

come

from?

It came from the rest of the world.

When

people in one nation save more than their own current investment spending
and government deficits, these additional savings will flow to wherever
the demand for them is the greatest.

Because we do not save enough to

fund our own investment and government deficits, we have had to rely on
the savings of our friends abroad.

Last year, foreigners bought, on net,

about $150 billion of U.S. bonds, equities and other assets.
But the process of attracting foreign savings is not costless; nor,
can it last forever.

To purchase dollar-denominated

first

these

had

value.

to acquire

dollars.

assets, foreigners

In the process, they bid up its

The increased value of the dollar

encourages

more

imports

and

discourages exports—the trade deficit that ensues provides the necessary
dollars for foreign investment in the U.S.
Thus, for every dollar of foreign savings we attracted, our trade
deficit

increased

by

reached approximately

one

dollar.

$150 billion.

Last

year

alone, our

trade

deficit

This figure is no coincidence.

It

represents precisely the $150 billion worth of our investment and government deficit that was financed by foreigners.



- 5 -

Now, should we worry if foreigners want to channel their savings
into the U.S.?

Perhaps, as long as this flow of foreign savings continues

unabated, we don't have to be overly concerned.

It's true, of course,

that import-competing and export industries suffer a reduction in output
and employment, but other industries pick up the slack.
is what has happened

since

1982; despite

our

large

Certainly, this

trade

deficits

in

recent years, our output and employment have grown at historic rates and
our unemployment rate has declined substantially.
So why worry?
tually must

Well, like all borrowing, our foreign debt even-

be repaid.

Currently, we

$450 billion, and this amount

owe

foreigners, on net,

is rising rapidly.

around

When it comes time to

repay our debt, we as a nation, like all debtors, will have to tighten
our belts; we'll have to consume less in order to repay.
This means, as we
living will be

repay

significantly

our
lower

foreign

debt,

that

our

standard

of

than it would have been otherwise.

Whether our economy will be forced to undergo a period of very low growth
to

repay

these debts

foreign borrowings.
be painless.

depends

on how

productively

we have

used

these

One thing, however, is certain; repayment will not

And, unless we can start to reduce the pace of growth of

our foreign indebtedness, the pain will be all the more severe.
A third possible source of financing is the Federal Reserve.

The

Fed, in the normal course of conducting monetary policy, purchases and
sells government securities.
tions.

This process

is called open market opera-

It represents the day-in and day-out manner by which the Federal

Reserve adjusts the nation's bank reserves and the money stock.




- 6 -

Occasionally,

someone

or other

suggests that the Federal Reserve

should buy even larger amounts of government debt and
amount

of

problem

domestic

with

securities,
this

this

foreign

"solution"

is

the

saving

that

is necessary.

The

that,

when

the

government

the

our need

deficit"

for

were

done

Fed

buys

chief

all, we would
of

have high

domestic

on

the

scale

If

necessary

to

savings meaningfully, the result would be both

perfectly predictable and catastrophic

collapse

reduce

it pays for these securities with newly-created money.

"monetizing

influence

and

thus

in the extreme.

inflation, high

financial

markets.

interest

In no

time at

rates and a general

"Chaotic"

would

be

a

mild

description of the consequence of such actions.
Now, Ifm not trying to scare us into saving
financial

ruin

if

we

don't

raise

our

savings

more by
rate.

threatening

All

available

evidence suggests that the Federal Reserve has not followed a policy of
monetizing the deficit in the past, and we are certainly not going to do
so in the future—for the very reasons that I've just mentioned.
My purpose for listing the potential options is to convince you how
important it is for us, as a nation, to save more and to start to do so
now.

Let us review the possibilities.

decline

drastically

and

forego

economic

Clearly, this is not desirable—something
can reduce the government deficit.

We can allow our investment to
growth

far

into

the

future.

to be avoided at all costs.

But that does not seem probable given

our experience of the past several years.

Thus, it seems that we have to

assume that the rate of investment and the deficit are given, and
real options are to finance it through domestic or foreign savings.




We

our

- 7 -

Financing
continuing

trade

these

expenditures

deficits

through

for now, but

foreign

ultimately

a

problem when we have to repay our foreign indebtedness•

savings
major

adjustment

Indeed, it seems

to me that the process of adjustment may have already begun.
have become

more

reluctant

to lend to us.

implies

Foreigners

This reluctance is clearly

demonstrated by the decline in the dollar exchange rate since 1985 and by
the decline of private foreign investment in the U.S.

In the past year,

a quarter of our trade deficit was financed by foreign central banks in
their attempt to prevent the dollar from declining even further.
What if even the central banks become reluctant?

The dollar would

fall more precipitously and real interest rates would have to rise.

The

rise in interest rates would ultimately increase savings, but it would
also reduce investment and add to the volatility of financial markets.
There is no doubt that market

forces will eventually solve the savings

and investment problem, and there is no doubt that eventually the savings
disparity and the international balance will be resolved.

But at what

cost?
On the other hand, if we were

to save more

at

rates, much of the adjustment pain could be alleviated.

current

interest

The dollar would

stabilize, interest rates would not have to rise, and investment
not have to be curtailed.

would

Thus, while we have always looked upon saving

as an individual virtue, at this time it has become a national priority.
You may recall, at the beginning of this talk, I promised to say
something about what the Federal Reserve can do to encourage Americans to
save more.

Directly, of course, the Fed can do nothing; you and I are

the ones who save and we make
circumstances and opportunities.



our

savings

decision

based

on

our

own

The Federal Reserve cannot save for us;

- 8 -

we have already discussed

the adverse consequences

that would occur if

the Federal Reserve were to monetize the federal deficit.
However,

the

Federal

Reserve

can

play

a

crucial—though

indirect—role by pursuing policy actions that foster a stable economic
environment, primarily one in which we have stable prices and reasonable
long-run

economic

growth.

I

believe

that

the

Federal

Reserve

can

accomplish this role, and I have proposed certain policy procedures that
will help it to do so.
actions

in place

nation,

will

I am convinced that, with the appropriate policy

to provide the necessary economic backdrop, we, as a

save

more.

And,

while

the

increase

in

savings

will

certainly not solve all our prospective problems, it would represent a
major step toward reducing the risks that we face in the coming years.