For
some time now, Mr. Ben Bernanke, Chairman
of the Federal Reserve Board, has been
arguing that the substantial increase
in the U.S. current account deficit, the
swing from moderate deficits to large
surpluses in ''emerging-market countries'',
and the significant decline in long-term
real interest rates, since 1996, are the
fall-out of a world ''savings glut''.
Some, especially authors from the IMF
stable, have gone further to explicitly
link this ''savings glut'' to the world
financial crisis. The present paper is
devoted to a close examination of this
''savings glut'' theory.
January 22, 2010.
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