Statistics Of Depression

 | Aug 03, 2016 02:06AM ET

The Personal Savings Rate is a rather important economic indication. Because it is derived from the difference between income and spending, it can tell us a great deal about the state of the economy from the consumer perspective. Unfortunately, nobody can say with any degree of confidence what the savings rate is right now, or even what it has been over the past few years.

Back in March, it was thought that the savings rate for November 2015, a rather important month situated between (so far) both bouts of “global turmoil”, was 4.9% and down slightly from 5.1% in October. The rate was fairly steady throughout 2015, only achieving an upward bend in December last year on into 2016.

Income and spending figures have since been revised, with incomes, like GDP , especially at the start of 2013 pushed upward. Spending, overall, was revised slightly lower. The combination of those two revisions is to produce a savings rate history that is completely unlike what was believed just a month ago. The figures now suggest that personal savings were 6.0% of income in November 2015, not 4.9%. Further, not only was the savings rate higher it had started rising as far back as late 2014.