Do the Russians Really Save That Much?—Alternate Estimates from the Russian Longitudinal Monitoring Survey
- 1 November 1999
- journal article
- Published by MIT Press in The Review of Economics and Statistics
- Vol. 81 (4) , 694-703
- https://doi.org/10.1162/003465399558418
Abstract
We use a new independent survey of 4,000 Russian households (the Russian Longitudinal Monitoring Survey or RLMS) to study their saving behavior. The RLMS household saving rate (12%) is less than half the official figure (29%). Despite the massive changes of the transition, the Russian household saving rate of 1994 cannot be shown to be different from that of 1976. The patterns of Russian household saving differ from international experience: Its paradoxical U-shaped saving-age relationship may be explained by the dramatic deterioration of life expectancies of middle-aged Russians. © 2000 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyKeywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Savings under quantity constraints: what can we learn from former Soviet families?Journal of Policy Modeling, 1996
- On the persistence of rationing following liberalization: a theory for economies in transitionEuropean Economic Review, 1996
- Saving and growth: Evidence from micro dataEuropean Economic Review, 1996
- Backward Bends, Quantity Constraints, and Soviet Labor Supply: Evidence from the Soviet Interview ProjectInternational Economic Review, 1993
- On the theory of household saving in the presence of rationingJournal of Comparative Economics, 1990
- Soviet Household Saving: A Cross-Section Study of Soviet Emigrant FamiliesThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1980
- The theory of household behaviour under rationingEuropean Economic Review, 1980
- Suppressed Inflation and the Supply MultiplierThe Review of Economic Studies, 1974