There does, however, seem to be a stronger relationship between nominal rates and savings rates. When you take inflation out of the picture, the chart looks like this.
This
implies that something called money illusion exists. Money illusion is when
people mistake nominal changes for real changes. If your savings after taxes
rise 2% and inflation is 2% you will think you are better off when in fact you
are no better or worse off than before.
There are two main problems with this.
(1)
If consumers were completely rational, they would take inflation into account
when they make their consumption/savings decision. Obviously they are not
completely rational as they take cues by nominal rates instead of real rates.
This poses a problem for economic modeling. Should we not use nominal rates
instead of real rates when modeling expected savings to get a more accurate
result?
(2)
When real interest rates go down savings needs to go up, not down. Consider
someone facing retirement in 20 years. They want an income of $30,000
($2,500/month) over 30 years in retirement. If their real rate of return is 5%,
they will have to save up $465,704.04 in today’s dollars to make that happen.[2]
They will need to save $1,940.43/month. However, if their real rate of return
is 1% they will need to save up $777,267.67 in today’s dollars by retirement.
That’s a monthly savings need of $2,926.89/month, a significant difference!
Consider what you will need to save if the real rate of return is negative! The
average American household would be hard-pressed to come up with the difference,
particularly given the fact that most aren’t even saving for retirement.
To
sum up: what actually happens and what needs to happen are at complete polar
opposites. What actually happens is that when nominal interest rates go down,
savings decreases. What needs to happen is that when REAL interest rates go
down, savings needs to INCREASE.
[2] All
projections in real terms, taxes not included, volatility not factored. Rates
of return are assumed to be the same before and after retirement of
illustrative purposes. I realize that retirement portfolios aren’t entirely in
10 Year Treasuries and the real rate actually experienced will differ. This was
just for illustrative purposes.
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