Tom Walker wrote: >Last week, Doug Henwood perfunctorily "debunked" my hypothesis that the >demographic bulge of the baby boom generation created an anomoulous bubble >in retirement savings during the 1990s. Perfunctorily? I'd say definitively. We're playing word games here. If there were a real bulge in savings as boomers prepared for retirement, it should show up in the aggregates. But there isn't - U.S. savings rates have declined to levels not seen since the early 1930s. People are speculating in stocks in what they call retirement accounts, whereas they used to put money into banks and bonds. >My question is: how much of the reported $2.7 trillion increase in asset >values of total retirement savings (line 5) between 1995 and 1997 came from >increases in asset prices and how much from net new money inflows? Well if we assume, based on the ICI figures, that 35% of the mutual fund inflow was into "retirement" accounts, then about 6% of it was new money inflows (35% of the $490 billion in net mutual fund purchases between 1994 and 1997). Here are the numbers since 1990 from the flow of funds accounts. The Fed ludicrously includes purchases of consumer durables (and allowances for their depreciation) in the FoF definition of savings; the NIPA concept, income less spending, makes a lot more sense. The columns show net financial investment (new saving less new borrowing, or, in the FoF jargon, net acquisition of financial assets less the net increase in liabilities); total net acquisitions of financial assets (purchases less sales), with detail shown for deposits (including money market mutual funds), credit market instruments, directly owned equities, and mutual funds; and the net increase in liabilities (new debts less repayments of old debts). The second panel shows disposable personal income and personal savings (by the NIPA definition). Note that households continue to be heavy net sellers of equities (which, you might conspiratorially read to be mostly owned by the very rich, who are effectively selling their holdings to the less affluent buyers of mutual funds). 1998 figures are annualized figures based on the first two quarters. U.S. HOUSEHOLDS, SAVING & BORROWING FLOWS, 1990-98 net acquisitions of financial assets --------------------------------------------- net credit net financ market mutual incr in invest total deposits instrum equities funds liabs 1990 365.7 622.3 58.6 202.7 -26.0 27.5 256.6 1991 223.7 417.1 -2.6 47.0 -33.3 103.3 193.4 1992 332.7 496.6 -17.5 61.2 23.6 133.9 163.9 1993 203.6 440.0 -67.6 1.0 -55.6 205.1 236.4 1994 217.6 530.5 -25.3 277.8 -157.5 67.4 312.9 1995 123.5 485.2 214.7 2.8 -197.5 94.5 361.6 1996 48.7 439.0 193.4 11.5 -282.9 174.8 390.2 1997 50.2 442.5 284.0 -109.5 -472.1 221.2 392.3 1998 -30.7 426.1 430.8 -228.6 -498.8 266.6 456.7 1990-98 1,535.1 4,299.2 1,068.5 265.7 -1,700.0 1,294.1 2,764.1 dispos pers saving (NIPA) personal ------------------ income total % of DPI 1990 4,171.4 213.3 5.1% 1991 4,340.9 243.5 5.6% 1992 4,605.1 264.1 5.7% 1993 4,791.1 210.4 4.4% 1994 5,018.9 176.8 3.5% 1995 5,277.1 179.8 3.4% 1996 5,534.7 158.5 2.9% 1997 5,795.1 148.9 2.6% 1998 5,965.2 54.2 0.9% 1990-98 45,499.3 1,649.4 3.6% Doug