Latin America and Caribbean countries are being warned that they face a savings crisis, with fiscal and demographic realities making the outlook worse in the coming years.
The warning comes in a new study released by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) that is also cautioning that the region faces “major fiscal challenges in the years ahead”.
The report estimates that the gross national saving rate in Latin America and the Caribbean at just 17.5 per cent of gross domestic product between 1980 and 2014, far below the 33.7 per cent for emerging Asia and 22.8 per cent for advanced economies.
Only Sub-Saharan Africa saved less, at 13.8 per cent.
The report analyses that the reasons behind the chronically low savings by households and governments; and economic impacts – from behavioural biases among individuals to structural inadequacies in financial systems and fiscal budgets. It also looks at inefficiencies in savings by firms, which invest too little.
On the upside, the report provides a road map for policymakers to bring savings rates more in line with successful economies.
Even small gains in savings could have big impacts, the IDB said, noting that for instance, for every one percentage point increase in national saving, domestic investment in the region increased by almost 0.4 percentage point.
This means that US$20 billion in more money available to finance vital infrastructure projects, the IDB said.
“We can’t just shrug off our poor savings rates by saying we are bad at putting money away,” said IDB chief economist Jose Juan Ruiz.
“This book shows governments, businesses and even families have it within their power to ensure we have the resources we need during the bad times and the good times, and to care for an ageing population,” he said.
The publication, Saving for Development: How Latin America and the Caribbean Can Save More and Better is part of the IDB’s flagship Development In the Americas series. It lays out the big gaps in the savings system in the region.
The report finds that the banking system has grown to provide around 30 per cent of GDP in loans to the private sector, but is still vastly underperforming Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and emerging Asian economies, which provide over 80 per cent of GDP in loans to the private sector.