The last post used the sector accounts to give the steps that led to there being €166 billion of gross national savings in 2021. Here we will look at bit closer at what this €166 billion was used for.
A large chunk of it was already accounted for by one item included in the previous post – €105 billion of gross capital formation. This left an excess of just over €60 billion of gross savings over investment.
Accounting for net capital transfers and the proceeds from acquisitions less disposals of non-produced assets meant that the total amount available for net lending was €64.4 billion. The sectoral split shows that almost all sectors were net lenders in 2021 with the only significant net borrowing being the €7 billion deficit recorded for the government sector.
So, that leads us to ask what did we do with that €64 billion? The answer is in the financial transactions account, though the numbers here are pretty big. Unfortunately we are not provided with the same sector split in this account (foreign-owned etc.) that is available elsewhere. Still the main sectors do provide some insight.
Across all sectors, total transactions in financial assets led to an increase in these assets of €644 billion while there were transactions giving a €583 billion increase in financial liabilities. The gap between them is net financial transactions and this was €60.9 billion in 2021.
This is not exactly equal to the €64.4 billion of net lending that was available in the capital account but given the scale of the figures it is not a surprise that they do not fully match. What may be a surprise in 2021 is that the largest contributor to the statistical discrepancy between the two is the household sector.
That aside, the figures for the household sector are the most straightforward. Households added almost €14 billion to their deposits in 2021. They also put nearly €4 billion in insurance and pension schemes.
The figures indicate the household bought nearly €6 billion of equities in 2021. Digging a little deeper into that item shows that around two-thirds of that was made up of purchases of unlisted shares. Transactions in unlisted shares was something that piqued our interest a few years ago but the scale here is significantly smaller.
The government column shows that there were excess liabilities taken on relative to the deficit that needed to be financed. With €20 billion borrowed versus a deficit of €7 billion this meant that €13 billion was added to the government’s financial assets, mainly deposits, which are held with the Central Bank.
The Central Bank itself is included as part of the financial corporate sector. The numbers here are enormous (in large part due to IFSC activities) but the net figures are pretty small. The figures for the non-financial corporate sector are also large and again it is hard to identify discernible patterns in the components but financial transactions did result in an improvement of around €44 billion in the financial position of the sector.
So what did we do with €166 billion of gross national savings? Spending on capital formation by all sectors added around €105 billion to the capital stock and left just over €60 billion for net lending. The household sector added €22 billion to its financial position, the corporate sectors sectors €46 billion, the while the government sector had to borrow €7 billion. The next step will be look at the impact these had on the national balance sheet.
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