Pubblicità | ARCHIVIO | FRASI IMPORTANTI | PICCOLO VOCABOLARIO
 













MARKETPRESS
  Notiziario
  Archivio
  Archivio Storico
  Visite a Marketpress
  Frasi importanti
  Piccolo vocabolario
  Programmi sul web








  LOGIN


Username
 
Password
 
     
   


 
Notiziario Marketpress di Venerdì 11 Giugno 2004
 
   
  Pagina1  
  COMPARISON OF HOUSEHOLD SAVING RATIOS EURO AREA / UNITED STATES / JAPAN  
   
  Francoforte, 11 giugno 2004  - The European Central Bank and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development have published a joint study comparing household saving ratios in the euro area, the United States and Japan. [pdf 64 kB] Households play a significant role in the economy. Their saving ratio is a summary measure of their income, consumption and saving activities.[1] Published household saving ratios are not fully harmonised across countries. The study published today presents, for the first time, experimental comparable saving ratios for the euro area, the United States and Japan. Although the ratios for all three economic areas declined in the course of the 1990s, the difference between the ratios in the euro area (9.6% in 2002) and the United States (2.4% in 2002) is significant and has even risen during that period. Japan has had a household saving ratio close to that of the euro area, except for 2001 and 2002 (5.2%). Part of this difference could potentially be explained by the varying legal and administrative arrangements in the areas concerned. The study analyses for three of these arrangements the possible effects on the household saving ratio: (1) the level of household consumption of public services; (2) the financing of government expenditure through income taxes or taxes on production and imports (like Vat); and (3) the organisation of pension arrangements through social security schemes or private pension schemes. Each of these causes could be behind some of the differences in the household saving ratios, but - when taken together - the divergence among the three areas concerned actually increases. A number of other factors, including households’ attitudes towards consumption and saving, and their possession of household durables, must be the cause of the differences between household saving ratios for the euro area, the United States and Japan.  
     
  <<BACK