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C H A PT E R 7 Savings and Investment Process
The level of savings of individuals is therefore a function of the age composition of the
population as a whole. A population shift to a large proportion of individuals in the productive
middle-age years would result in a greater savings potential. These views of the life stages
of the individual saver are consistent with the generation-wave approach described by Harry
Dent Jr. That is, if a large number of individuals are moving through their individual life
cycles at approximately the same time, their combined eff orts will have a major impact on the
overall economy. On a collective basis, they spend at about the same time and are also likely to
save at about the same time. Spending has kept the U.S. economy in almost continual growth
since the early 1980s, and saving/investing in retirement plans and directly in mutual funds
(which, in turn, buy bonds and stocks) helped the stock market reach historical highs during
the 1990s. A substantial decline in stock prices preceded a downturn in economic activity at
the beginning of the twenty-fi rst century, which was then followed by economic expansion and
increasing stock prices until the onset of the 2007–08 fi nancial crisis and the 2008–09 Great
Recession. Since then, economic recovery and increasing stock prices have prevailed.
Life Stages of the Corporation and Other Business Firms
As the fi nancial savings of individuals are governed partly by age, so the fi nancial savings
generated by a business fi rm are a function of its life stage. The following are the life cycle
stages of a successful business fi rm:
• Start-up stage
• Survival stage
• Rapid growth stage
• Maturity stage
Not all business fi rms proceed through all fi xed life cycle stages. To the extent, however,
that a fi rm experiences the typical pattern of starting up, surviving, vigorous growth, and ulti-
mate maturity, its fl ow of fi nancial savings may experience a predictable pattern.
While developing the business idea and in the starting the business stage, the fi rm is
spending cash rather than building cash. The business fi rm, typically, continues to burn
cash as it tries to fi nd a successful operating niche. During the early part of the expansion
years (rapid growth stage) of a successful business, the volume of physical assets, typically,
increases rapidly. So rapid is this growth that the fi rm is unable to establish a strong position
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