What Determines the Saving Behavior of German Households? An Examination of Saving Motives and Saving Decisions
Content
Many motives for saving a portion of one’s income co-exist and their relative importance
changes over the life-cycle. However, most existing work focuses on only one of those
motives and makes simplifying assumptions about the other motives so that they can be
relegated to the background. All the more it is important to investigate heterogeneity in
saving behavior in the presence of various co-existing saving motives. This paper is
concerned with linking heterogeneity in German households’ savings decisions to four coexisting
saving motives. First, I find that the importance that households attach to the
saving motives is related to how much households save at different life stages. Second, I
classify the saver type of the households based on whether they engage in regular savings
plans, or rather save irregularly and without a savings plan and I find that saving motives
are related to the saver type of the household. The results show that heterogeneity in
saving behavior along two dimensions – with respect to the saving rate and the saver type
– is systematically related to the importance that households attach to different saving
motives. This suggests that policy reforms that change the importance of certain saving
motives in the eyes of private households might alter household saving behavior in various ways.
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