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Should Latin America Save More to Grow Faster?
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Latin America’s historically low saving rates and sub-par growth performance raise the question of whether the region should save more to grow faster. Economists generally resist acknowledging a policy-exploitable causal connection going from saving to growth because domestic saving is perceived to be fully endogenous, optimally determined, or fully substitutable by foreign saving. However, to the extent that these three assumptions do not hold, three channels can be established through which higher domestic saving—by curbing persistent current account deficits—can promote medium-term growth. The channels are first, a real interest rate channel, whereby higher saving reduces the cost of capital and enhances macro sustainability; second, a real exchange rate channel, through which higher saving leads to a more competitive real exchange rate; and third, an endogenous saving channel, whereby saving follows growth and, hence, subsequently compounds the effect of the first two channels. Econometric evidence supports all three channels and suggests that the lower-saving countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, especially those with recurrently weak balance of payments and persistent domestic demand pressures on the non-tradable sector, would benefit the most from boosting their saving rates.
- Subjects :
- INVESTMENT
CAPITAL FLOWS
GROWTH RATES
TAX
STOCK MARKET
COUNTRY RISK
MIDDLE- INCOME COUNTRIES
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
EXCHANGE RATES
DEPOSIT
COMMODITY
FINANCIAL SECTOR
INVESTOR BEHAVIOR
INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR
SAFETY NETS
CAPITAL CONTROLS
INCOME
DOMESTIC CAPITAL
DISPOSABLE INCOME
FINANCIAL CRISIS
CAPITAL FLIGHT
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
BALANCE SHEETS
COLLATERAL
SHARES
FOREIGN FINANCING
RATE OF GROWTH
DEBT CRISES
CAPITAL INFLOW
SKILLED WORKERS
MARGINAL COST
INFLATION CRISIS
PENSIONS
TRADES
INCOMES
SOVEREIGN DEBT
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
CURRENT ACCOUNT SURPLUSES
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
PRICES
OPEN ECONOMY
PURCHASING POWER
EXCHANGE RATE REGIMES
NATURAL RESOURCE
MONETARY POLICY
PUBLIC SAVINGS
LIQUIDITY
LONG-TERM FINANCE
INTEREST RATES
DEBT
TRADE
COST OF CAPITAL
DIVIDEND
SAVING
FINANCIAL SERVICES
MARKET VOLATILITY
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
CENTRAL BANK
INCOME GROUP
DIVIDENDS
CAPITAL OUTFLOWS
CAPITAL MARKET
INSURANCE POLICY
INTERNATIONAL RESERVE
MARKET BEHAVIOR
CREDIT CONSTRAINTS
BINDING CONSTRAINT
REGIME CHANGES
POLITICAL ECONOMY
FOREIGN ASSETS
EXCHANGE
AGGREGATE DEMAND
PRIVATE SAVING
CAPITAL MARKETS
EXTERNAL COMPETITIVENESS
GOVERNANCE
RISK PREMIUM
FINANCIAL CRISES
OUTPUT RATIOS
CAPITAL RATIO
FISCAL POLICY
OUTPUT
EXCHANGE RATE
RATE OF RETURN
HUMAN CAPITAL
FINANCIAL STABILITY
FOREIGN CAPITAL
INSURANCE
CURRENCY
RATE OF RETURN ON CAPITAL
PRICE
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
TAXES
EQUITY
CROSS-BORDER CAPITAL
INFLATION CRISES
INFLATION RATES
CAPITAL ACCOUNT
SOCIAL PROTECTION
OUTPUT RATIO
CLOSED ECONOMY
COMPETITION
DEBT CRISIS
COMMODITY PRICES
MACROECONOMIC POLICY
GROWTH RATE
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FUTURE
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
CREDIT RATING
OUTPUT GAPS
EXPOSURE
GLOBALIZATION
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
INVESTOR
PUBLIC SAVING
LONG- TERM FINANCE
INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT
LIBERALIZATIONS
EQUILIBRIUM VALUES
INTEREST
EXTERNAL FINANCE
POWER PARITY
CURRENCY MISMATCHES
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
NATURAL RESOURCES
SUBSIDY
SAVINGS
CAPITAL INFLOWS
FOREIGN DEBT
SHARE
INFLATION EPISODES
INTEREST RATE
FOREIGN CURRENCY
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
GROWTH ●INVESTMENT
VOLATILITY
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.od......2456..53a5b7a0a5a6e92832d6d592b33600f8