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International Comparisons of Household Saving (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report)
 
 
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International Comparisons of Household Saving (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report) [Hardcover]

James M. Poterba (Editor)

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Book Description

March 1, 1994 0226676218 978-0226676210 1
Governments and corporations may chip in, but around the world houshold saving is the biggest factor in national saving. To better understand why saving rates differ across countries, this volume provides the most up-to-date analyses of patterns of household saving behavior in Canada, Italy, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

Each of the six chapters examines micro data sets of household saving within a particular country and summarizes statistics on patterns of saving by age, income, and other demographic factors. The authors provide age-earning profiles and analyses of the accumulation of wealth over the lifetime in a clear way that allows quick comparisons between earning, consumption, and saving in the six countries.
Designed as a companion to Public Policies and Household Saving (1994), which addresses saving policies in the G-7 nations, this volume offers detailed descriptions of saving behavior in all G-7 nations except France.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This paper uses Canadian microdata to examine age profiles of income, consumption, saving, and wealth holding. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
financial saving rates, median saving rates, aggregate household saving rate, nondurable expenditure, smoothed medians, expected replacement rate, household saving behavior, age polynomial, individual saving rates, microdata sources, cohort techniques, government transfer income, strong cohort effects, asset decumulation, cohort dummies, net financial assets, middle cohorts, financial asset holdings, smoothed profiles, median consumption, public pension benefits, real estate wealth, income quartile, earnings uncertainty, saving profiles
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, United Kingdom, Bank of Italy, Statistics Canada, Deutsche Bundesbank, New York, University of Chicago Press, Bureau of the Census, Family Expenditure Survey, Luigi Guiso, Age Age, Ignazio Visco, West Germany, Working Paper, Albert Ando, Cambridge University Press, Designated Statistics, Lonnie Magee, National Bureau of Economic Research, Statistisches Bundesamt, Tullio Jappelli, Canadian Journal of Economics, Discussion Paper, Journal of Monetary Economics, Leslie Robb
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