A Survey of Household Saving Behavior in Japan
This paper presents data on Japan's household saving rate, considers the reasons for Japan's high household saving rate in the past and the reasons for the recent decline therein, projects future trends in Japan's household saving rate, and consider the implications of my findings. It finds that Japan's high household saving rate was a temporary phenomenon and that it was high in both absolute and relative terms during the 1955-95 period (especially during the 1960s and 1970s) but that it was not unusually high during the prewar and early postwar periods or after 1995; second, that Japan's temporarily high household saving rate was due not to culture but to temporary economic, demographic, and institutional factors; third, that the decline in Japan's household saving rate since the mid-1970s is due to the weakening of these factors and that Japan's household saving rate can be expected to decline even further as these factors become even less applicable and that the rapid aging of Japan's population has played the most important role; and fourth, that there is nothing to worry about even if Japan's household saving rate falls to zero or even negative levels.
Year of publication: |
2007-03
|
---|---|
Authors: | Horioka, Charles Yuji |
Institutions: | Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER), Osaka University |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The Life and Work of Martin Stuart ("Marty") Feldstein
Horioka, Charles Yuji, (2014)
-
Are Japanese Households Financially Healthy, and If So, Why? A Group of Seven (G7) Comparison
Horioka, Charles Yuji, (2012)
-
Horioka, Charles Yuji, (2014)
- More ...