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Current account dynamics and saving-investment nexus in a changing and uncertain world

•The paper examines the determinants of current account (CAB), saving and investment.•Global financial instability causes developing economies to improve CAB.•The more a country experiences wars, the better its CAB will be.•A climatological or geographical disaster raises its CAB, national saving, a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of international money and finance 2025-02, Vol.151, p.103238, Article 103238
Main Authors: Chinn, Menzie, Ito, Hiro
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•The paper examines the determinants of current account (CAB), saving and investment.•Global financial instability causes developing economies to improve CAB.•The more a country experiences wars, the better its CAB will be.•A climatological or geographical disaster raises its CAB, national saving, and investment.•A rise in U.S. monetary uncertainty lowers saving and investment, but raises CAB. We re‐examine the determinants of current account balances (CAB) and the saving-investment nexus with focus on emerging market and developing economies (EMDEs). We are in a new age in terms of facing not just economic challenges but also other non-economic challenges such as global climate changes, increasing natural disasters, and wars. We face the need to reexamine the determinants of CAB along with national saving and investment. We first take an event study approach, examining how these variables have evolved historically in the wake of wars, natural disasters, and pandemics. The second is a cross‐country panel investigation of CAB, national saving, and of investment. In the presence of global financial instability, EMDEs tend to experience an improvement in CAB due to a fall in investment. A rise in oil prices increases both national saving and investment, but the change in investment is greater than the change in national saving, which worsens CAB. Contractionary monetary policy by the U.S. Federal Reserve Board tends to lower both national saving and investment, but the impact on CAB is not statistically different from zero. The more frequently a country experiences wars, on average, its CAB tends to improve. When a climatological or geographical disaster happens, all of its CAB, national saving, and investment tend to improve. A rise in the level of U.S. monetary policy uncertainty leads to an improvement in CAB, mainly due to a fall in investment.
ISSN:0261-5606
DOI:10.1016/j.jimonfin.2024.103238