AFP: Once avid savers, Japanese saving less
Japanese households, once known for their fastidious saving habits, squirrelled away a record low proportion of their income in 2006, two-thirds less than a decade ago, officials said Wednesday. Japanese households saved only 3.2 percent of their disposable income in 2006, compared with 11.4 percent in 1997, according to government data. Figures for 2007 have not yet been announced. "Income levels have fallen in recent years. Also the aging population has pressured saving levels," said an official with the Cabinet Office, which published the data recently. "It is not yet clear how much impact the graying population is having on the overall saving rate. But the trend of a falling saving rate is certain to continue," he said. Japanese people once prided themselves as being among the world's most avid savers, with the household savings rate reaching as high as 23 percent in 1975. However, in recent years, babyboomers began to retire and started to spend their savings. Years of economic stagnation and deflation have also depressed salaries while Japan's super-low interest rates provide little incentive for people to store up cash in a bank account.
Consumption hasn't been a big engine for the economy in recent years and this data confirms that whatever spending has taken place has been largely the result of lower saving or people actually digging in to their existing savings.