"Here is a graph of the U.S. savings rate as a percent of disposable personal income.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
It looks like savings from lower gasoline prices is showing up as savings - as opposed to other consumption - and this process of increasing savings is a necessary step towards restoring healthy household balance sheets( I AGREE ).
This is one of the areas some analysts really got wrong during the housing bubble. As an example, here is Larry Kudlow in 2006: Riding the Right Curve
Despite the grim picture the mainstream media continue to paint about just about everything ... there’s one thing they just can’t taint: This U.S. economy remains very healthy.By focusing on net wealth (inflated by the housing bubble and excessive stock prices), Mr. Kudlow completely missed the biggest story of our time. As I noted then, the savings rate (as calculated by the BEA), is the true savings rate. The savings rate was too low then - and the rate remains too low now - but it is starting to recover."
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The latest chant is that ... a day of reckoning marked by a housing-price crash and an overwhelming debt burden is headed our way. This is utter nonsense.
...
Family net wealth, the nation’s true savings rate, advanced 8 percent in 2005 to a record level of $52 trillion.
I would like the rate to go gradually up.
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