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"Excess savings" won't rescue UK consumption

Posted on Tuesday, June 28, 2022 at 02:27PM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | Comments1 Comment

Economic “optimists” argue that UK / US recessions will be avoided because households and firms have accumulated a “war chest” of excess monetary savings that will be deployed to support spending. The assessment here is that high inflation is rapidly eroding excess money balances while households / firms are unlikely to reduce precautionary savings against a backdrop of deteriorating economic / financial conditions.

Chart 1 is a recreation of one used to support the optimistic case. The suggestion is that UK households have amassed £170 billion of excess monetary savings, equivalent to 11% of annual disposable income.

Chart 1

A statistical issue here is the reliability of a measure of “trend” calculated over just two years.

More importantly, the demand to hold money depends on a host of influences, of which the most important is the price level. Any assessment of the magnitude of excess money balances should, at a minimum, take account of inflation.

Chart 2 recasts the analysis in real terms, while calculating “trend” over a 10-year period. The suggestion is that high inflation has already eroded a large proportion of the monetary excess, with the current deviation equivalent to 3% of disposable income.

Chart 2

Real money holdings were 2.7% above trend in April. Household M4 grew at a 4.2% annualised rate in the latest three months. If this pace were to be maintained, nominal money holdings would rise by 2.4% by Q4 2022. The Bank of England’s May forecast of CPI inflation of 10.2% in Q4, meanwhile, implies an increase in prices of 5.0% between April and then. These projections would entail a further 2.5% contraction in real money holdings by Q4. With “trend” increasing by 1.2% between April and Q4, the current positive deviation would swing to a small negative.

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Reader Comments (1)

It's another factor that might hide the underlying trends and possibly cause policy errors.

Strongly doubt the distribution of this war chest is evenly distributed.

June 28, 2022 | Unregistered CommenterDavid Cotton

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