Frum: Americans are Saving More Money
David Frum reports:
KAI RYSSDAL: This may not be the perfect moment to mention this, what with all the holiday spending that's going on out there, and the fact that the economy needs that spending, but we're actually saving more now that we used to. Commentator David Frum says that's a good thing.
DAVID FRUM: Americans are saving again. More than six cents out of every check goes unspent. A big change from the past decade when the saving rate dropped to nearly nothing.
Is the change permanent? Or will all our good resolutions dissipate with a reviving economy? We all could use a new pair of shoes.
I'll go out on a limb here and propose, yes, I think the change will endure. Americans have passed through a searing generational experience. Nobody who lived through the crash of 2008 will ever again believe that a rising home price or stock portfolio can substitute for money in the bank.
More than 14 million Americans still owe more on their homes than their homes are worth. They have to save if they ever wish to move without defaulting on their loan. The biggest bulge of the baby boom -- Americans born after 1958 -- are moving into their 50s; for most of us the last clear chance to accumulate financial assets before retirement.