On the relationship between domestic saving and the current account: Evidence and theory for developing countries
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Brueckner, Markus
Paczos, W.
Pappa, E.
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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University
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We examine the relationship between domestic saving and the current account in developing countries. Our three main findings are that: (i) domestic saving has a small effect on the current account||(ii) domestic saving has a significant positive effect on the trade balance - this effect is much larger than the effect that domestic saving has on the current account||(iii) domestic saving has a significant negative effect on net-current transfers. We use countries in the sub-Saharan African region as a laboratory for an instrumental variables approach. The IV approach enables to obtain estimates of casual effects. Underlying the IV approach is the significant positive first-stage response of domestic saving to plausibly exogenous annual rainfall: an unanticipated, transitory supply-side shock. We construct a small open-economy DSGE model with debt adjustment costs and endogenous current transfers to match the empirical findings. The model enables to examine the relationship between domestic saving and the current account for different types of shocks. An important message of our paper is that, for developing countries, estimates of the relationship between domestic saving and domestic investment are not informative for answering the question how domestic saving effects a country's accumulation of net foreign assets.
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Centre for Applied Macroeconomic Analysis Working Papers
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