Testing genuine saving Hamilton, Kirk
Material type: TextSeries: Policy Research Working Paper, no. 3577Publication details: Washington, D.C. The World Bank 2005Description: 13 pSubject(s): DDC classification:- 332.6
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book | Ahmedabad | 332.6 H2T3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 162135 |
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332.6 H2I6 The inefficient stock market: what pays off and why | 332.6 H2I6-2013 Investing: the last liberal art | 332.6 H2N3 New finance: overreaction, complexity, and uniqueness | 332.6 H2T3 Testing genuine saving | 332.6 H3A7 The art of value investing: how the world's best investors beat the market | 332.6 H3C6/2001 Contemporary investments: security and portfolio analysis | 332.6 H4E2 The economics of asymmetric information |
Includes bibliographical references.
"""The World Bank has been publishing estimates of adjusted net or ""genuine"" saving since 1999. This measure of saving treats depletion of natural resources as a type of economic depreciation. Hamilton uses recent theoretical results relating growth in saving to growth in future consumption to provide a test of genuine saving using historical data. Did measured genuine saving in 1976, for example, ""predict"" the observed changes in consumption over subsequent decades? The author tests four alternative measures of saving econometrically. The worst measure, in terms of explained variation, is traditional net saving. Genuine saving adjusted to reflect population growth exhibits the worst fit with theory. Both gross saving and genuine saving perform better, with good concordance with theory, while genuine saving exhibits a moderate advantage in terms of goodness of fit. ""--World Bank web site."
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