Volume 12, Issue 2 June 2016

Household saving behavior in the euro area

Abstract

We study saving motives and household saving behavior in fifteen euro-area countries using the first wave of the Household Finance and Consumption Survey that covers the years 2008-11. We find that precautionary saving is the most commonly reported motive in all countries, followed by saving for old-age provision. Preferences for other motives are then rather heterogeneous across countries. Saving for home purchase and precautionary saving are monotonically decreasingly important with age. Variables related to the structure of the tax system and to the generosity of the social security and welfare systems are important determinants of household saving. As for actual saving behavior, we find that most households in the euro area perceived their expenses over the last twelve months to be about the same as expenses in a "normal" year in the past and about the same as income over the last twelve months. The analysis by country reveals some degree of heterogeneity for this measure of self-assessed household saving: the countries that were hit most severely by the financial crisis display higher financial stress.

Authors

  • Julia Le Blanc
  • Alessandro Porpiglia
  • Federica Teppa
  • Junyi Zhu
  • Michael Ziegelmeyer

JEL codes

  • C8
  • D12
  • D14
  • D91

Other papers in this issue

Olympia Bover and Martin Schürz and Jiri Slacalek and Federica Teppa

Olympia Bover and Jose Maria Casado and Sonia Costa and Philip Du Caju and Yvonne McCarthy and Eva Sierminska and Panagiota Tzamourani and Ernesto Villanueva and Tibor Zavadil

Luc Arrondel and Laura Bartiloro and Pirmin Fessler and Peter Lindner and Thomas Y. Mathä and Cristiana Rampazzi and Frédérique Savignac and Tobias Schmidt and Martin Schürz and Philip Vermeulen

Marco Casiraghi and Eugenio Gaiotti and Lisa Rodano and Alessandro Secchi

Joshua Aizenman and Mahir Binici and Michael M. Hutchison

Daniela Bragoli and Massimiliano Rigon and Francesco Zanetti