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Is the U.S. a Spendthrift Nation?

Robert Lipsey and Irving B. Kravis

No 2274, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc

Abstract: The belief that the U.S. is a nation of spendthrifts, unwilling to pro- vide for the future, rests on observations of particular narrow definitions of capital formation, on the use of nominal values that ignore inter- national differences in the relative prices of capital goods, and on concentration on the ratio of capital formation to total output rather than on the amount of capita1 formation per capita. By a broad definition of capital formation, the U.S. has been investing a proportion of its gross output in the last decade and a half that is not far below that of other developed countries, even in nominal terms. In world prices, or real terms, U.S. capital formation was a higher proportion of output than in nominal terms. Real gross capital formation per capita in the U.S., even by a narrow definition of capital formation, was above the average for developed countries. By a broad measure of capital formation, few countries surpassed the U.S. in per capita real capital formation.

Date: 1987-06
Note: ITI IFM
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)

Published as Chapter 2, "Saving and Capital Formation in the United States and Other Industrial Countries" from Saving and Economic Growth: Is the United States Really Falling Behind?, re. by Kravis and Lipsey. NY: American Council of Life Insurance and The Conference Board, report No. 90.

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