'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?

This paper examines the empirical evidence on saving trends in the global economy and the emergence of a single real long-term interest rate, from a Keynesian point of view. The essentially Ricardian position of bodies such as the IMF implies a 'savings shortage' which is theoretically imp...

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Main Author: FitzGerald, E
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1996
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author FitzGerald, E
author_facet FitzGerald, E
author_sort FitzGerald, E
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description This paper examines the empirical evidence on saving trends in the global economy and the emergence of a single real long-term interest rate, from a Keynesian point of view. The essentially Ricardian position of bodies such as the IMF implies a 'savings shortage' which is theoretically implausible, and non-clearing market may be better explained by Keynesian concepts of liquidity applied to asset preference. The empirical evidence seems to indicate that global capital markets do not act so as to integrate national saving pools, despite interest rate convergence among both industrialized and industrializing countries. The resulting 'rationed market' reflects uncertainty among investors as to future macroeconomic conditions, which in turn results from the failure of major economies to coordinate government fiscal stances.
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spelling oxford-uuid:99fc742a-f85f-4353-ac8c-e57c7230b2922022-03-27T00:18:13Z'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:99fc742a-f85f-4353-ac8c-e57c7230b292EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrints1996FitzGerald, EThis paper examines the empirical evidence on saving trends in the global economy and the emergence of a single real long-term interest rate, from a Keynesian point of view. The essentially Ricardian position of bodies such as the IMF implies a 'savings shortage' which is theoretically implausible, and non-clearing market may be better explained by Keynesian concepts of liquidity applied to asset preference. The empirical evidence seems to indicate that global capital markets do not act so as to integrate national saving pools, despite interest rate convergence among both industrialized and industrializing countries. The resulting 'rationed market' reflects uncertainty among investors as to future macroeconomic conditions, which in turn results from the failure of major economies to coordinate government fiscal stances.
spellingShingle FitzGerald, E
'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?
title 'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?
title_full 'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?
title_fullStr 'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?
title_full_unstemmed 'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?
title_short 'Global' Saving and Interest Rate Behaviour: Why Don't International Capital Markets Clear?
title_sort global saving and interest rate behaviour why don t international capital markets clear
work_keys_str_mv AT fitzgeralde globalsavingandinterestratebehaviourwhydontinternationalcapitalmarketsclear