Economy
Capital, Savings, and Investment
In the United States and in
other market economies, financial firms and markets channel savings into
capital investments. Financial markets, and the economy as a whole, work
much better when the value of the dollar is stable, experiencing neither
rapid inflation nor deflation. In the United States, the Federal Reserve
System functions as the central banking institution. It has the primary
responsibility to keep the right amount of money circulating in the
economy.
Investments are one of the most
important ways that economies are able to grow over time. Investments
allow businesses to purchase factories, machines, and other capital
goods, which in turn increase the production of goods and services and
thus the standard of living of those who live in the economy. That is
especially true when capital goods incorporate recently developed
technologies that allow new goods and services to be produced, or
existing goods and services to be produced more efficiently with fewer
resources.
Investing in capital goods has a
cost, however. For investment to take place, some resources that could
have been used to produce goods and services for consumption today must
be used, instead, to make the capital goods. People must save and reduce
their current consumption to allow this investment to take place. In the
U.S. economy, these are usually not the same people or organizations
that use those funds to buy capital goods. Banks and other financial
institutions in the economy play a key role by providing incentives for
some people to save, and then lend those funds to firms and other people
who are investing in capital goods.
Interest rates are the price
someone pays to borrow money. Savings institutions pay interest to
people who deposit funds with the institution, and borrowers pay
interest on their loans. Like any other price in a market economy,
supply and demand determine the interest rate. The demand for money
depends on how much money people and organizations want to have to meet
their everyday expenses, how much they want to save to protect
themselves against times when their income may fall or their expenses
may rise, and how much they want to borrow to invest. The supply of
money is largely controlled by a nation’s central bank—which in the
United States is the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve
increases or decreases the money supply to try to keep the right amount
of money in the economy. Too much money leads to inflation. Too little
results in high interest rates that make it more expensive to invest and
may lead to a slowdown in the national economy, with rising levels of
unemployment.
Providing
Funds for Investments in Capital
To
take advantage of specialization and economies of scale, firms must
build large production facilities that can cost hundreds of millions of
dollars. The firms that build these plants raise some funds with new
issues of stock, as described above. But firms also borrow huge sums of
money every year to undertake these capital investments. When they do
that, they compete with government agencies that are borrowing money to
finance construction projects and other public spending programs, and
with households that are borrowing money to finance the purchase of
housing, automobiles, and other goods and services.
Savings play an important role
in the lending process. For any of this borrowing to take place, banks
and other lenders must have funds to lend out. They obtain these funds
from people or organizations that are willing to deposit money in
accounts at the bank, including savings accounts. If everyone spent all
of the income they earned each year, there would be no funds available
for banks to lend out.
Among the three major sectors of
the U.S. economy—households, businesses, and government—only
households are net savers. In other words, households save more money
than they borrow. Conversely, businesses and government are net
borrowers. A few businesses may save more than they invest in business
ventures. However, overall, businesses in the United States, like
businesses in virtually all countries, invest far more than they save.
Many companies borrow funds to finance their investments. And while some
local and state governments occasionally run budget surpluses, overall
the government sector is also a large net borrower in the U.S. economy.
The government borrows money by issuing various forms of bonds. Like
corporate bonds, government bonds are contractual obligations to repay
what is borrowed, plus some specified rate of interest, at a specified
time.
Matching
Borrowers and Lenders in Financial Markets
Households
save money for several reasons: to provide a cushion against bad times,
as when wage earners or others in the household become sick, injured, or
disabled; to pay for large expenditures such as houses, cars, and
vacations; to set aside money for retirement; or to invest. Banks and
other financial institutions compete for households’ savings deposits
by paying interest to the savers. Then banks lend those funds out to
borrowers at a higher rate of interest than they pay to savers. The
difference between the interest rates charged to borrowers and paid to
savers is the main way that banks earn profits.
Of course banks must also be
careful to lend the money to people and firms that are creditworthy—meaning
they will be able to repay the loans. The creditworthiness of the
borrower is one reason why some kinds of loans have higher rates of
interest than others do. Short-term loans made to people or businesses
with a long history of stable income and employment, and who have assets
that can be pledged as collateral that will become the bank’s property
if a loan is not repaid, will receive the lowest interest rates. For
example, well-established firms such as AT&T often pay what is
called the bank’s prime rate—the lowest available rate for
business loans—when they borrow money. New, start-up companies pay
higher rates because there is a greater risk they will default on the
loan or even go out of business.
Other kinds of loans also have
greater risks of default, so banks and other lenders charge different
rates of interest. Mortgage loans are backed by the collateral of the
property the loan was used to purchase. If someone does not pay his or
her mortgage, the bank has the right to sell the property that was
pledged as collateral and to collect the proceeds as payment for what it
is owed. That means the bank’s risks are lower, so interest rates on
these loans are typically lower, too. The money that is loaned to people
who do not pay off the balances on their credit cards every month
represents a greater risk to banks, because no collateral is provided.
Because the bank does not hold any title to the consumer’s property
for these loans, it charges a higher interest rate than it charges on
mortgages. The higher rate allows the bank to collect enough money
overall so that it can cover its losses when some of these riskier loans
are not repaid.
If a bank makes too many loans
that are not repaid, it will go out of business. The effects of bank
failures on depositors and the overall economy can be very severe,
especially if many banks fail at the same time and the deposits are not
insured. In the United States, the most famous example of this kind of
financial disaster occurred during the Great Depression of the 1930s,
when a large number of banks failed. Many other businesses also closed
and many people lost both their jobs and savings.
Bank failures are fairly rare
events in the U.S. economy. Banks do not want to lose money or go out of
business, and they try to avoid making loans to individuals and
businesses who will be unable to repay them. In addition, a number of
safeguards protect U.S. financial institutions and their customers
against failures. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
insures most bank and savings and loan deposits up to $100,000.
Government examiners conduct regular inspections of banks and other
financial institutions to try to ensure that these firms are operating
safely and responsibly.
U.S.
Household Savings Rate
A
broader issue for the U.S. economy at the end of the 20th century is the
low household savings rate in this country, compared to that of many
other industrialized nations. People who live in the United States save
less of their annual income than people who live in many other
industrialized market economies, including Japan, Germany, and Italy.
There is considerable debate
about why the U.S. savings rate is low, and several factors are often
discussed. U.S. citizens may simply choose to enjoy more of their income
in the form of current consumption than people in nations where living
standards have historically been lower. But other considerations may
also be important. There are significant differences among nations in
how savings, dividends, investment income, housing expenditures, and
retirement programs are taxed and financed. These differences may lead
to different decisions about saving.
For example, many other nations
do not tax interest on savings accounts as much as they do other forms
of income, and some countries do not tax at least part of the income
people earn on savings accounts at all. In the United States, such
favorable tax treatment does not apply to regular savings accounts. The
government does offer more limited advantages on special retirement
accounts, but such accounts have many restrictions on how much people
can deposit or withdraw before retirement without facing tax penalties.
In addition, U.S. consumers can
deduct from their taxes the interest they pay on mortgages for the homes
they live in. That encourages people to spend more on housing than they
otherwise would. As a result, some funds that would otherwise be saved
are, instead, put into housing.
Another factor that has a direct
effect on the U.S. savings rate is the Social Security system, the
government program that provides some retirement income to most older
people. The money that workers pay into the Social Security system does
not go into individual savings accounts for those workers. Instead, it
is used to make Social Security payments to current retirees. No savings
are created under this system unless it happens that the total amount
being paid into the system is greater than the current payments to
retirees. Even when that has happened in the past, the federal
government often used the surplus to pay for some of its other
expenditures. Individuals are also likely to save less for their own
retirement because they expect to receive Social Security benefits when
they retire.
The low U.S. savings rate has
two significant consequences. First, with fewer dollars available as
savings to banks and other financial institutions, interest rates are
higher for both savers and borrowers than they would otherwise be. That
makes it more costly to finance investment in factories, equipment, and
other goods, which slows growth in national output and income levels.
Second, the higher U.S. interest rates attract funds from savers and
investors in other nations. As we will see below, such foreign
investments can have several effects on the U.S. economy.
Borrowing
from Foreign Savers
The
flow of funds from other nations enables U.S. firms to finance more
investments in capital goods, but it also creates concerns. For example,
in order for foreigners to invest in U.S. savings accounts and U.S.
government or corporate bonds, they must have dollars. As they demand
dollars for these investments, the price of the dollar in terms of other
nations’ currencies rises. When the price of the dollar is rising,
people in other countries who want to buy U.S. exports will have to pay
more for them. That means they will buy fewer goods and services
produced in the United States, which will hurt U.S. export industries.
This happened in the early 1980s, when U.S. companies such as
Caterpillar, which makes large engines and industrial equipment, saw the
sales of their products to their international customers plummet. The
higher value of the dollar also makes it cheaper for U.S. citizens to
import products from other nations. Imports will rise, leading to a
larger deficit (or smaller surplus) in the U.S. balance of trade, the
amount of exports compared to imports.
Foreign investment has other
effects on the U.S. economy. Eventually the money borrowed must be
repaid. How those repayments will affect the U.S. economy will depend on
how the borrowed money is invested. If the money borrowed from foreign
individuals and companies is put into capital projects that increase
levels of output and income in the United States, repayments can be made
without any decrease in U.S. living standards. Otherwise, U.S. living
standards will decline as goods and services are sent overseas to repay
the loans. The concern is that instead of using foreign funds for
additional investments in capital goods, today these funds are simply
making it possible for U.S. consumers and government agencies to spend
more on consumption goods and social services, which will not increase
output and living standards.
In the early history of the
United States, many U.S. capital projects were financed by people in
Britain, France, and other nations that were then the wealthiest
countries in the world. These loans helped the fledgling U.S. economy to
grow and were paid off without lowering the U.S. standard of living. It
is not clear that current U.S. borrowing from foreign nations will turn
out as well and will be used to invest in capital projects, now that the
United States, with the largest and wealthiest economy in the world,
faces a low national savings rate.