News
It's Time to Resist the Gadgets
Saturday 19th of July 2003
But a recent article brings it all down to a personal level in a rather scary way.
In his weekly newsletter, BNZ chief economist Tony Alexander notes our increasing tendency to save in the form of housing rather than financial assets - bonds, shares and so on.
This wouldn't matter quite so much if our total savings were the same as in other developed countries but with a housing bias, he says.
But that's not the way it is. The value of our houses, relative to our incomes or the size or our economy, is not a lot higher than in other developed countries.
It's simply that our financial assets are extraordinarily low.
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In his weekly newsletter, BNZ chief economist Tony Alexander notes our increasing tendency to save in the form of housing rather than financial assets - bonds, shares and so on.
This wouldn't matter quite so much if our total savings were the same as in other developed countries but with a housing bias, he says.
But that's not the way it is. The value of our houses, relative to our incomes or the size or our economy, is not a lot higher than in other developed countries.
It's simply that our financial assets are extraordinarily low.
Read More - Opens in a new window
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