Saving Viewed from a Cross-National Perspective
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Household saving is still little understood, and even the basic facts – for instance: How
does saving change over the life cycle? Does saving turn negative in old age? – are controversial.
Understanding saving behavior is not only an important question of economic theory because the
division of income in consumption and saving concerns one of the most fundamental household
decisions, but it is also of utmost policy relevance. One reason is that private household saving as
a private insurance interacts with social policy as public insurance. Population ageing and its
threat to the sustainability of the public insurance systems have put the spotlight back on own
saving as a device for old-age provision. Solving the pension crises therefore requires
understanding saving. Another reason is growth: capital accumulation through saving increases
economic growth directly, and indirectly through changes in labor productivity.
The topic of household savings is by no means uncharted territory. Recent comprehensive
surveys of the work on saving include Deaton (1992), Browning and Lusardi (1996), and
Attanasio (1999). These surveys illustrate the many challenges the theory faces in matching the
empirical facts about saving as well as the need to use micro data to understand saving behavior.
This volume adds a distinctive international dimension to these studies of saving. It
presents the results of the "International Savings Comparison Project" – a project performed
under the auspices of a European Union sponsored network of researchers.4 The main focus of
this project is the interaction of household saving with public policy, notably the generosity of
public pension systems. In this sense, our work is very much in the tradition of Feldstein’s (1974)
seminal study. However, we transpose the inference from time series data to a set of international
panel data drawn from six country studies. These studies analyze household saving in four
European countries – Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom – and in Japan
and the United States.
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