Turkey - Country Economic Memorandum (CEM) : Sustaining High Growth - The Role of Domestic savings : Synthesis Report

Domestic savings in Turkey declined significantly in the 2000s. The domestic savings rate declined from an average of 23.5 percent of gross national income in the 1990s to an average of 17 percent over the 2000-2008 period, and further to 12.7 percent in 2010. This decline was driven by the sharp fall in private saving, while public saving increased through most of the period. A strong fiscal adjustment underpinned the improvement in public savings in the post-2001 period. The adjustment was pursued to correct the fiscal expansion of the previous decade, and it led to a sharp reduction in the public debt to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio. This improved the public saving-investment balance and helped reduce the vulnerability of the economy to external shocks. With an expected increase in future investment needs, continued fiscal discipline will be vital for sustainable growth. The fall in private savings after 2001 was mostly a result of the decline in macroeconomic vulnerabilities. While the economy was growing fast, the positive impact of income growth on savings was overridden by an acceleration of private consumption stimulated by the increased availability of credit, fall in interest rates and previously postponed consumption. As the economy normalized and interest rates and inflation declined, so did household precautionary motives for saving. Eventually, however, continued economic stability and implementation of reforms discussed below should encourage saving by raising incomes. Structurally, Turkish households have a strong precautionary motive for savings. Macroeconomic vulnerabilities and the resulting unstable income streams, the risk of unemployment, and health risks are obvious reasons for household decisions to save. Declining interest rates (as in the 2000s) that reflected reduced risk premium and hence vulnerability reduced precautionary savings motives. Households where the head is an employer or self-employed rather than a wage earner tend to save more, while households where there is a green card holder (a non-contributory health program) save less, controlling for the income effect.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2011-12
Subjects:ACCESS TO FINANCE, ACCOUNTING, ADDITIONAL INCOME, ADDITIONAL SAVINGS, AMOUNT OF SAVING, AMOUNT OF SAVINGS, AVAILABILITY OF CREDIT, AVERAGE GROWTH, BALANCE SHEET, BALANCE SHEETS, BANK DEPOSIT, BANK DEPOSITS, BANK LOANS, BANKING SYSTEM, BANKS, BENEFICIARIES, BEQUEST, BOND, BOND MARKET, BOND MARKETS, BONDS, BORROWING, BUSINESS CLIMATE, CALCULATIONS, CAPITAL ACCUMULATION, CAPITAL EXPENDITURE, CAPITAL FLOWS, CAPITAL FORMATION, CAPITAL GROWTH, CAPITAL MARKET, CAPITAL MARKETS, CASH FLOWS, CONSUMER LOANS, CONTINGENCIES, CONTRIBUTION, CONTRIBUTIONS, CORPORATE BOND, CORPORATE BONDS, CORPORATE FINANCE, CREDIT CARD, CREDIT CARDS, CREDIT CONSTRAINED FIRMS, CREDIT FLOWS, CREDIT LIMIT, CURRENCY, CURRENT ACCOUNT, CURRENT EXPENDITURES, CURRENT RATE, DEPOSIT, DEPOSITS, DEPRECIATION, DEPRECIATIONS, DEVELOPING FINANCIAL MARKETS, DISPOSABLE INCOME, DISPOSABLE INCOMES, DIVERSIFICATION, DOMESTIC CURRENCY, DURABLE GOODS, EARNINGS, ECONOMIC COOPERATION, ECONOMIC DECISIONS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT, ECONOMIC POLICIES, EDUCATION LEVEL, EDUCATION LEVELS, EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT, EMPLOYEE, EMPLOYEE SAVINGS, EMPLOYER, EMPLOYERS, ENTREPRENEURS, EXCHANGE RATE, EXTERNAL FINANCE, EXTERNAL FINANCING, EXTERNAL SHOCKS, FAMILIES, FAVORABLE TERMS, FINANCIAL ASSETS, FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT, FINANCIAL EDUCATION, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS, FINANCIAL LITERACY, FINANCIAL LITERACY STRATEGY, FINANCIAL LITERACY SURVEY, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, FINANCIAL MARKET, FINANCIAL MARKET DEVELOPMENT, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL SECTOR, FINANCIAL SYSTEM, FISCAL DISCIPLINE, FISCAL PERFORMANCE, FISCAL POLICY, FIXED CAPITAL, FOREIGN CURRENCY, FORM OF SAVING, GENERAL PUBLIC, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD SAVING, HOUSEHOLD SAVINGS, HUMAN CAPITAL, INCOME, INCOME GROUP, INCOME GROUPS, INCOME LEVEL, INCOME LEVELS, INCOME TAXES, INCOMES, INCREASE IN INCOME, INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT, INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT, INFLATION, INFORMAL ECONOMY, INFORMED FINANCIAL DECISIONS, INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING, INSTALLMENT, INSURANCE, INTEREST COSTS, INTEREST PAYMENTS, INTEREST RATE, INTEREST RATES, INTERNAL FINANCE, INVESTING, INVESTMENT CLIMATE, INVESTMENT CORPORATION, INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES, IRA, LABOR FORCE, LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION, LABOR MARKET, LARGE FIRMS, LEVEL OF EDUCATION, LIFETIME, LIVING STANDARDS, LOCAL CURRENCY, LONG-TERM SAVING, LONG-TERM SAVINGS, LOW INCOME, LOW-INCOME, LOW-INCOME GROUP, LOWER INTEREST RATES, LUMP SUM, MACROECONOMIC STABILITY, MARKET ECONOMY, MEDIUM ENTERPRISES, MINIMUM PAYMENT, MINIMUM WAGE, MODERATE INCOME, MODERATE-INCOME, MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, MODERATE-INCOME INDIVIDUALS, MONETARY POLICY, MORTGAGE, MORTGAGE LOANS, MUTUAL FUND, MUTUAL FUNDS, NET WORTH, OPERATING COSTS, PENSION, PENSION FUNDS, PENSION MEMBERS, PENSION SCHEME, PENSION SCHEMES, PENSION SYSTEM, PERSONAL FINANCE, PHYSICAL ASSETS, PHYSICAL CAPITAL, PRECAUTIONARY SAVING, PRECAUTIONARY SAVINGS, PRIMARY EDUCATION, PRIVATE PENSION, PRIVATE PENSIONS, PRIVATE SAVING, PRIVATE SAVINGS, PRIVATIZATION, PRODUCTIVITY, PROFIT MARGIN, PROFIT MARGINS, PROFITABILITY, PUBLIC DEBT, PUBLIC EXPENDITURES, PUBLIC FINANCES, PUBLIC INVESTMENT, PURCHASES, RAPID DEVELOPMENTS, REGRESSION ANALYSIS, RETIREMENT BENEFITS, REVOLVING FUNDS, RISK PERCEPTIONS, RISK PREMIUM, SALARY, SALES, SAVERS, SAVING BEHAVIOR, SAVINGS, SAVINGS ACCOUNTS, SAVINGS RATE, SAVINGS RATES, SECONDARY EDUCATION, SECURITIES, SEVERANCE PAY, SOCIAL SECURITY, SPECIAL SAVING, STAKEHOLDERS, STOCK EXCHANGE, STOCKS, SURVEY OF CONSUMER, SURVEY OF CONSUMER FINANCES, TAX BURDEN, TAX EXEMPTION, TAX INCENTIVES, TAX RATE, TAX RATES, TAX-EXEMPT, TERMINATION, TOTAL SAVING, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE, UNION, UNSTABLE INCOME, VALUABLE, VOLATILE INCOME, WAGE, WITHDRAWAL, WORK FORCE, WORKING AGE, WORKING AGE POPULATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/12/17011874/turkey-country-economic-memorandum-cem-sustaining-high-growth-role-domestic-savings-synthesis-report
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/12264
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