자료 1: [excerpts] Show Us the Money (The Economist, July 1st 2010)
If cautious firms pile up more savings, the prospects for recovery are poor. Economies will be stuck in the current—and odd—configuration where corporate surpluses fund government deficits. If firms loosen their purse-strings to hire workers and to invest, that will allow governments to scale back their borrowing.
Firms in America have been saving, too, even if they have not been quite as thrifty as British ones. The Federal Reserve's measure of the “financing gap”, the shortfall of corporate income relative to spending, was minus 0.8% of GDP (ie, a surplus) last year, though the gap closed in the first quarter of 2010. The surplus is bigger if the retained earnings of foreign subsidiaries are included, as they are in European measures.
On the face of it firms are in a position to spend more and aid the recovery. After all, businesses are supposed to be repositories for saving, not a source of it. Optimists point to the record $1.6 trillion that American firms have on deposit, in money-market funds, and in bonds and bills. With interest rates so low, this cash might be put to work more profitably. Firms may well have cut their spending too much in the rush to conserve cash during the darkest period of the crisis. Consumer spending has turned out to be stronger than had been feared, says David Bowers of Absolute Strategy Research. “Capital spending, inventories and jobs are too low given the level of consumption,” he argues. ( ... ... )
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