C H A P T E R 2 5
S AV I N G , I N V E S T M E N T, A N D T H E F I N A N C I A L S Y S T E M
5 6 1
(denoted as
Y
) is divided into four components of expenditure: consumption (
C
),
investment (
I
), government purchases (
G
), and net exports (
NX
).
We write
Y
C
I
G
NX.
This equation is an identity because every dollar of expenditure that shows up on
the left-hand side also shows up in one of the four components on the right-hand
side. Because of the way each of the variables is defined and measured, this equa-
tion must always hold.
In this chapter, we simplify our analysis by assuming that the economy we are
examining is closed. A
closed economy
is one that does not interact with other
economies. In particular, a closed economy does not engage in international trade
in goods and services, nor does it engage in international borrowing and lending.
Of course, actual economies are
open economies
—that is, they interact with other
economies around the world. (We will examine the macroeconomics of open
economies later in this book.) Nonetheless, assuming a closed economy is a useful
simplification by which we can learn some lessons that apply to all economies.
Moreover, this assumption applies perfectly to the world economy (inasmuch as
interplanetary trade is not yet common).
But wait. There is a big difference.
Profits grow over time.
If that dividend
should increase with profits, say at a
rate of 5 percent annually, then, by the
30th year, your annual dividend payment
will be over $800, or one-third more than
the bond is yielding. The price of the
stock almost certainly will have risen
as well.
By this simple exercise, we can see
that stocks—even with their profits
growing at a moderate 5 percent—will
return far more than bonds over long pe-
riods. Over the past 70 years, stocks
have annually returned 4.8 percent-
age points more than long-term U.S.
Treasury bonds and 6.8
points more
than Treasury bills, according to Ibbot-
son Associates Inc., a Chicago research
firm.
But isn’t that extra reward—what
economists call the “equity premium”—
merely the bonus paid by the market to
investors who accept higher risk, since
returns for stocks are so much more un-
certain than for bonds? To this question,
we respond: What extra risk?
In his book “Stocks for the Long
Run,” Jeremy J. Siegel of the University
of Pennsylvania concludes: “It is widely
known that stock returns, on average,
exceed bonds in the long run. But it is lit-
tle known that in the long run, the risks in
stocks are less than those found in
bonds or even bills!” Mr. Siegel looked
at every 20-year holding period from
1802 to 1992 and found that the worst
real return for stocks was an annual av-
erage of 1.2
percent and the best was
an annual average of 12.6 percent. For
long-term bonds, the range was
minus
3.1 percent to plus 8.8 percent; for T-
bills, minus 3.0 percent to plus 8.3 per-
cent.
Based on these findings, it would
seem that there should be no need for
an equity risk premium at all—and that
the correct valuation for the stock mar-
ket would be one that equalizes the
present value of cash flow between
stocks and bonds in the long run. Think
of the market as offering you two assets,
one that will pay you $1,000 over the
next 30 years
in a steady stream and
another that, just as surely, will pay you
the $1,000, but the cash flow will vary
from year to year. Assuming you’re in-
vesting for the long term, you will value
them about the same. . . .
Allow us now to suggest a hypothe-
sis about the huge returns posted by the
stock market over the past few years:
As mutual funds have advertised the re-
duction of risk acquired by taking the
long view, the risk premium required by
shareholders has gradually drifted down.
Since Siegel’s results suggest that the
correct risk premium might be zero, this
drift downward—and the corresponding
trend toward higher stock prices—may
not be over. . . . In the current environ-
ment, we are very comfortable both in
holding stocks and in saying that pundits
who claim the market is overvalued are
foolish.
Source:
The Wall Street Journal,
Monday, March 30,
1998, p. A18.
5 6 2
PA R T N I N E
T H E R E A L E C O N O M Y I N T H E L O N G R U N
Because a closed economy does not engage in international trade, imports and
exports are exactly zero. Therefore, net exports (
NX
) are also zero.
In this case, we
can write
Y
C
I
G.
This equation states that GDP is the sum of consumption, investment, and gov-
ernment purchases. Each unit of output sold in a closed economy is consumed, in-
vested, or bought by the government.
To see what this identity can tell us about financial markets, subtract
C
and
G
from both sides of this equation. We obtain
Y
C
G
I.
The left-hand side of this equation (
Y
C
G
) is the total income in the economy
that remains after paying for consumption and government purchases: This
amount is called
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