The United States deficit on current account, now running at an annual rate of over $700 billion, has reached levels (as a percent of U.S. GDP) not seen since the first decades of the nineteenth century. The deficit is soaking up roughly three-quarters of the world's available external surpluses. Were the deficit to continue at this pace, the U.S. could ultimately converge to an external debt/GDP ratio around 1. Several analyses suggest that a rapid adjustment of the deficit toward balance would require a very sharp real depreciation of the U.S. dollar. This paper reviews the limitations of some optimistic arguments that predict instead a "soft landing " for the dollar. I focus in particular on the view that greater financial...
The US current account deficit has been persistently large and has brought the country's ratio of fo...
In this paper we will consider issues relating to the historically low US saving rate and the large ...
s indicated by D’Arista and Griffith-Jones (2006), the United States has for most of the past twenty...
The United States deficit on current account, now running at an annual rate of over $700 billion, ha...
T he massive deficit in the U.S. trade and current accounts is one of the moststriking features of t...
The United States has run an increasingly large current account deficit over the last few years. J. ...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
It has been three years since I last wrote on the UScurrent account deficit for CESifo Forum, based ...
United States trade and current-account deficits have risen sharply in recent years. The current ac...
The path of the dollar In the past three years the US dollar has been declining whilst the US curren...
institutions express increasing concern about the growing U.S. current account deficit. There is a g...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
In recent years the US current account deficit has grown to the point that most observers consider i...
TWO MAIN FORCES underlie the large U.S. current account deficits of the past decade. The first is an...
April 2001 For more than 20 years, the United States has run current-account deficits with the rest ...
The US current account deficit has been persistently large and has brought the country's ratio of fo...
In this paper we will consider issues relating to the historically low US saving rate and the large ...
s indicated by D’Arista and Griffith-Jones (2006), the United States has for most of the past twenty...
The United States deficit on current account, now running at an annual rate of over $700 billion, ha...
T he massive deficit in the U.S. trade and current accounts is one of the moststriking features of t...
The United States has run an increasingly large current account deficit over the last few years. J. ...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
It has been three years since I last wrote on the UScurrent account deficit for CESifo Forum, based ...
United States trade and current-account deficits have risen sharply in recent years. The current ac...
The path of the dollar In the past three years the US dollar has been declining whilst the US curren...
institutions express increasing concern about the growing U.S. current account deficit. There is a g...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
In recent years the US current account deficit has grown to the point that most observers consider i...
TWO MAIN FORCES underlie the large U.S. current account deficits of the past decade. The first is an...
April 2001 For more than 20 years, the United States has run current-account deficits with the rest ...
The US current account deficit has been persistently large and has brought the country's ratio of fo...
In this paper we will consider issues relating to the historically low US saving rate and the large ...
s indicated by D’Arista and Griffith-Jones (2006), the United States has for most of the past twenty...