Does productivity growth boost savings? Causal evidence from transition episodes
Does productivity growth boost savings? Causal evidence from transition episodes
We introduce a novel approach to uncovering causation by exploiting transition episodes in aggregate macroeconomic data. Using a panel of 132 countries over 1961–2017, we identify twenty-six productivity-growth and forty savings transitions, episodes characterized by sudden, persistent, and unpredictable increases in growth and savings. Event-study evidence shows that productivity-growth transitions lead to sustained increases in savings, whereas savings transitions do not generate sustained growth effects. We conduct extensive robustness checks addressing staggered transitions, heterogeneous effects, and unobserved time-varying confounders. Having established the direction of causality, we estimate the effects of productivity-growth and productivity shocks (estimated separately for each country using a neoclassical model) on savings using panel Vector Auto-Regressions and local projections. We find that a one standard deviation increase in productivity growth raises the savings ratio by approximately 0.5 percentage points, highlighting the importance of policies that promote productivity growth to increase savings, rather than relying solely on savings-focused interventions.
Kumar, Abhishek
bf1591a0-5a8b-40ae-a3b3-6a4ef990564e
Mallick, Sushanta
24be23c0-3cb6-44b2-8255-f9204b17d06d
Sen, Kunal
ed55147b-03b2-4e1c-bd24-23910d306b67
Kumar, Abhishek
bf1591a0-5a8b-40ae-a3b3-6a4ef990564e
Mallick, Sushanta
24be23c0-3cb6-44b2-8255-f9204b17d06d
Sen, Kunal
ed55147b-03b2-4e1c-bd24-23910d306b67
Kumar, Abhishek, Mallick, Sushanta and Sen, Kunal
(2026)
Does productivity growth boost savings? Causal evidence from transition episodes.
Oxford Economic Papers, [gpag006].
(doi:10.1093/oep/gpag006).
Abstract
We introduce a novel approach to uncovering causation by exploiting transition episodes in aggregate macroeconomic data. Using a panel of 132 countries over 1961–2017, we identify twenty-six productivity-growth and forty savings transitions, episodes characterized by sudden, persistent, and unpredictable increases in growth and savings. Event-study evidence shows that productivity-growth transitions lead to sustained increases in savings, whereas savings transitions do not generate sustained growth effects. We conduct extensive robustness checks addressing staggered transitions, heterogeneous effects, and unobserved time-varying confounders. Having established the direction of causality, we estimate the effects of productivity-growth and productivity shocks (estimated separately for each country using a neoclassical model) on savings using panel Vector Auto-Regressions and local projections. We find that a one standard deviation increase in productivity growth raises the savings ratio by approximately 0.5 percentage points, highlighting the importance of policies that promote productivity growth to increase savings, rather than relying solely on savings-focused interventions.
Text
gpag006
- Version of Record
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 March 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510687
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510687
ISSN: 0030-7653
PURE UUID: 02673423-d299-4653-a24e-8b5b2d0a74be
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 16 Apr 2026 16:42
Last modified: 17 Apr 2026 02:08
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Abhishek Kumar
Author:
Sushanta Mallick
Author:
Kunal Sen
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics