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How to increase US's saving rate

Officials realise more savings mean more investment and faster growth, yet legislation to encourage personal savings has failed to succeed

savings, household savings
Illustration by Binay Sinha
Martin Feldstein New Delhi
Last Updated : Aug 01 2018 | 10:16 PM IST
The United States needs new policies to raise the household saving rate. From 1960 to 1980, the household saving rate ranged between 10 per cent and 13 per cent of after-tax income, providing funds for investment in plant and equipment. Since then, levels of household saving have declined sharply. The comparable average saving rate in the past decade averaged only 5.5 per cent and is now just 3.4 per cent.

The cause for the decline is unclear. One plausible explanation is that working-age households may no longer feel the need to provide for their retirement years because of their greater confidence in the social security retirement program. Although Social Security was created in the 1930s, there was widespread fear in the 1960s and 1970s that the programme would not survive politically because of conservative opposition. But when the Social Security programme was about to run out of funds in 1982, a very conservative president, Ronald Reagan, rescued it. After that, it was reasonable to assume that Social Security benefits would continue to be available. Saving for health care in old age was also not necessary, thanks to the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

Whatever the cause of the current low household saving rate, it is a serious problem that requires political action. Fortunately, attitudes in the US Congress have been changing over time. In the early post-World War II years, when the Great Depression was still in recent memory, a Keynesian fear of economic slumps caused politicians to favour a decline in the saving rate. A lower saving rate, it was believed, would mean more consumer spending and therefore stronger demand and higher employment. But as policymakers came to realise that a high level of saving would actually mean more investment and faster growth, the Congress passed legislation to encourage more personal saving.

The most important such response was the creation of so-called 401(k) accounts, which allow employers to contribute funds to retirement accounts for their employees. These 401(k) plans are employer-sponsored and employer-managed. The Congress also created tax-favoured Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA) that now allow individuals to set aside up to $5,500 a year and manage their IRA in whatever way they see fit. Contributions to IRAs, up to the limit, may be deducted from taxable income, and the return on the investment in the IRA accumulates tax-free until the funds are withdrawn. Both the 401(k) accounts and the IRAs, therefore, provide a higher after-tax real return, strengthening the incentive to save.

Illustration by Binay Sinha

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Although both of these programmes have been successful in encouraging increased saving, the cumulative effect still leaves the overall saving rate very low. One reason is that millions of small firms did not create 401(k) plans, owing to the cost of establishing and managing them. And, firms have been reluctant to force employees, who know that the funds will not be available until they reach retirement age, to reduce their wages by contributing to such plans.

The Congress is now proposing to change the rules to get around these problems. Small firms would be able to join with others to establish 401(k) plans, thereby benefiting from lower administration costs. And the government would give small firms a grant to defray the cost of establishing a new plan.

Perhaps more important would be to give small businesses the opportunity to create “automatic enrolment plans,” which experience shows is very effective in getting employees to join and sustain saving in 401(k) plans. In this scenario, employees are automatically enrolled in a 401(k) plan with the understanding that they may withdraw funds when they want them — that is, without waiting until they reach retirement age.

Here’s why automatic enrolment is so important. When new employees are offered the opportunity to have 5 per cent of their salary deposited in a 401(k) plan, a relatively small share of them choose to participate. But if the same employees are told that the company will automatically enrol them in a 401(k) plan with the same 5 per cent salary reduction and that they may withdraw those funds at will, most accept the salary reduction and do not withdraw the funds.

It is not clear whether this legislation will pass in the current Congress. What is clear is that the US household saving rate is too low, and that legislative changes of this type are needed to begin moving it back to its earlier level.
The writer is professor of economics at Harvard University and president emeritus of the National Bureau of Economic Research, chaired President Ronald Reagan’s Council of Economic Advisers from 1982 to 1984
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018
www.project-syndicate.org 

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First Published: Aug 01 2018 | 10:07 PM IST

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